Migrants stuck at the Idomeni camp on the Greek border left the camp to try to cross the border to Macedonia, forming a human chain across a river. .Report by LydiaBatham.

published:15 Mar 2016

views:989

I created this video with the YouTube Video Editor (http://www.youtube.com/editor)

published:14 Mar 2014

views:9

Smugglers in Libya are auctioning migrants off as slaves. At a property outside Tripoli, CNN's Nima Elbagir witnessed a dozen men go under the hammer in the space of minutes.

published:15 Nov 2017

views:1352579

SOENDERBORG, DENMARK — Danish nightclub owner Tom HoldenJensen says he’d rather go to prison than overturn a “language test” he instituted.
Jensen is demanding that those who wish to enter his establishment must speak either Danish, German or English. Jensen, who runs the Buddy Holly club in Soenderborg, says he’s received too many complaints from women who said they felt threatened or intimidated by groups of sexually aggressive young migrant men who do not speak any of the commonly spoken European languages.
Jensen strenuously denies he is racist in any way and says the language test is designed to make sure his staff is able to communicate with customers, which sometimes includes informing them that their behavior is unacceptable.
“The challenge is that we can’t communicate with refugees, they don’t understand what I’m saying at all,” Mr. Jensen told the MailOnline. “We’ve had these challenges with all men, whatever their nationality, not only the Syrian refugees, and we’ve always had these challenges,” he continued while also noting that Danish clubs have had language rules in place in some form since 1997.
But Denmark has strict anti-discrimination laws which state that anyone in a commercial or public utility who denies service to anyone due to their race, color, national or ethnic origin, religion or sexual orientation, can be fined or even imprisoned for up to six months.
Jensen says bring it on. He’s not planning on changing his policy and said he’d rather go to prison. It’s unclear if Jensen is actually breaking the law by instituting a language test which is, according to the club, designed to enhance safety measures. A police spokesperson quoted in the MailOnline said he didn’t know if ‘language’ falls under the ‘nationality’ clause in the law and legal experts may have to rule on this issue.
----------------------------------------­---------------------
Welcome to TomoNews, where we animate the most entertaining news on the internets. Come here for an animated look at viral headlines, US news, celebrity gossip, salacious scandals, dumb criminals and much more! Subscribe now for daily news animations that will knock your socks off.
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published:30 Jan 2016

views:10798

Millions of migrants seeking asylum in Europe face hostility, racism, and red tape. John Oliver does one admittedly tiny thing for one of them.
Connect with Last Week Tonight online...
Subscribe to the Last Week Tonight YouTube channel for more almost news as it almost happens: www.youtube.com/user/LastWeekTonight
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published:28 Sep 2015

views:9949993

Hundreds of migrants broke through Hungarian police lines near the Serbian border on Monday and marched north on the main highway to Budapest as authorities once again were overwhelmed by the human tide passing through Hungary.
Police repeatedly tried to form lines blocking roadways around a migrant-holding centre near the border village of Roszke.
But the asylum seekers vastly outnumbered police and were able to go around authorities, racing through farm fields to reach the M5 motorway which runs from Serbia into Hungary.
The birthday of the Hindu deityKrishna was celebrated in Mumbai on Sunday with the annual Dahi Handi festival.
The tradition involves participants, known as govindas, forming a human pyramid to reach a pot filled with curd hanging above the ground.
Hindu legend says that Lord Krishna used to like butter and curd, and formed pyramids with his friends in order to steal the pots.
Although an annual tradition, local authorities have limited the height at which the pots can be tied, as injuries have been known to take place.
Find out more about AP Archive: http://tinyurl.com/neh3pb4
Story number for this item is: 4003108

published:16 Sep 2015

views:24536

Opinion polls have shown for some time that the public sees immigration as one of the most important issues facing Britain (Ipsos Mori, 2015). At the same time, public understanding of evidence on the economic impacts of immigration is poor and strongly influenced by the media. This in turn affects the quality and content of public debate and the policy formulation process. This video presents evidence of the economic benefits of immigration to the UK and to London, but acknowledges that there has been some impact on pay, and that there are ‘winners and losers’. It is targeted at a wide audience who lack accurate information about migration impacts from which to form their opinions. It is intended to stimulate thinking and debate.
For details of the sources used in this video, please visit the NIESR website here: http://tinyurl.com/j5e47nd

published:08 Feb 2016

views:31237

Hundreds of PEGIDA (Patriotic EuropeansAgainst the Islamisation of the West) supporters, as well as right-wing Czech activists, gathered at Schirnding municipality at the German-Czech border to form a 'human wall' in protest against a record influx of refugees and migrants coming to both EU countries.
Video ID: 20151108-076
Video on Demand: http://www.ruptly.tv
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DailyMotion: http://www.dailymotion.com/ruptly

published:08 Nov 2015

views:124109

(21 Oct 2015) A group of 68 refugees flew from Italy bound for Sweden and Finland on Wednesday as part of the first phase of the European Union's relocation plan.
The 49 Eritreans and 19 Syrians took off from Rome's Ciampino Airport and will land at Finland's Kemi-Tornio airport, before some are then moved on to Sweden.
One Syrian refugee said he was "very happy" to be part of the first to make the trip.
According to the International Organisation for Migrants Finland has agreed to take 3,200 over two years form Italy and Greece.
In this first test phase they are taking 400.
The Italian government has said it hopes the relocation process will become more frequent with around 100 refugees departing each day.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/5b470909ca684dbc0d072388159219ee
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

published:17 Nov 2016

views:333

Tens of thousands of migrants from around the world are stranded in Tijuana, Mexico as they try to make it across the border to the United States.
The United States has long been known for welcoming immigrants from around the globe - from refugees fleeing war to opportunity seekers looking for a better quality of life.
These days many migrants attempting to enter the U.S. say they feel like they're being pushed away rather than embraced.
One city bordering the United States that has seen the arrival of an estimated 30-thousand migrants in the last two years is Tijuana. There are more than 30 shelters that house just the migrants from Haiti alone. In fact, one local pastor and his wife have donated land to them with the hope it will become Mexico’s first “Little Haiti.”
Check out Mike Kirsch’s package for “Americas Now” to find out more about these migrants and their life in limbo.
Watch CGTN LIVE on your computer, tablet or mobile
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published:05 Nov 2017

views:13659

El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala form what is known as Central America's "NorthernTriangle". The region is overrun by organised crime and gangs, resulting from violent civil wars that rocked the three countries in the 1980s.
According to a report from the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), over 137,000 people from the Northern Triangle entered the US last year, up until June alone. Figures show that hundreds of thousands of men, women and children continue to try and flee poverty and violence in an attempt to reach the United States at any price.
Contrary to claims made by the Trump administration, the number of undocumented migrants from Mexico has fallen in the last few years. However, it is the Central Americans who are increasingly attempting to cross the border, especially from El Salvador.
El Salvador has the highest murder rate in the world, and according to the 2016 El Salvador Crime and SafetyReport conducted by the US Overseas Security Advisory Council, almost one quarter of all Salvadorans were victims of crime in 2015. Salvadorans travel by land across Guatemala into Mexico - arguably the most dangerous part of the journey - where countless migrants are robbed, kidnapped, raped and/or killed by Mexican criminal gangs that control the route.
Since PresidentDonald Trump renewed his vow to build an impenetrable wall to keep undocumented migrants out, traffickers - commonly known as "coyotes" - have raised their fees, trying to cash in on desperation to reach the land of the American dream before its too late.
In 2014 President Barack Obama approved a special refugee reunification program to discourage tens of thousands of Central American children from risking their lives to join undocumented parents in the US. The program was set to give these children refugee status - the Trump administration has since stopped the scheme in its tracks, raising concerns of a new wave of unaccompanied minors trying to reach the border.
Talk to Al Jazeera travels to El Salvador to see what is driving the migration wave and at what price.
More from Talk To Al Jazeera on:
YouTube - http://aje.io/ttajYT
Facebook - http://facebook.com/talktoaj
Twitter - http://twitter.com/talktoaljazeera
Website - http://www.aljazeera.com/talktojazeera/

El Salvador

El Salvador (i/ɛlˈsælvədɔːr/; Spanish:[el salβaˈðor]), officially the Republic of El Salvador (Spanish:República de El Salvador, literally "Republic of The Savior"), is the smallest and the most densely populated country in Central America. El Salvador's capital and largest city is San Salvador. As of 2015, El Salvador had a population of approximately 6.38 million, making it the most densely populated country in the region. Its population consists largely of Mestizos of European and Indigenous American descent.

Oliver has said that he has full creative freedom, including free rein to criticize corporations. His initial contract with HBO was for two years with an option for extension. In February 2015, it was announced that the show has been renewed for two additional seasons of 35 episodes each. Oliver and HBO programming president Michael Lombardo have discussed extending the show from half an hour to a full hour and airing more than once a week after Oliver "gets his feet under him".

Al Jazeera

Al Jazeera (Arabic:الجزيرة‎al-ǧazīrahIPA:[æl dʒæˈziːrɐ], literally "The Peninsula", referring to the Arabian Peninsula), also known as JSC (Jazeera Satellite Channel), is a Doha-based state-funded broadcaster owned by the Al Jazeera Media Network, which is partly funded by the House of Thani, the ruling family of Qatar. Initially launched as an Arabic news and current affairs satellite TV channel, Al Jazeera has since expanded into a network with several outlets, including the Internet and specialtyTV channels in multiple languages.

Al Jazeera is among the largest news organizations with 80 bureaus around the world. Al Jazeera is owned by the government of Qatar. While Al Jazeera officials have stated that they are editorially independent from the government of Qatar, this assertion has been disputed.

The original Al Jazeera channel's willingness to broadcast dissenting views, for example on call-in shows, created controversies in the Arab States of the Persian Gulf. The station gained worldwide attention following the outbreak of war in Afghanistan, when it was the only channel to cover the war live, from its office there.

SOENDERBORG, DENMARK — Danish nightclub owner Tom HoldenJensen says he’d rather go to prison than overturn a “language test” he instituted.
Jensen is demanding that those who wish to enter his establishment must speak either Danish, German or English. Jensen, who runs the Buddy Holly club in Soenderborg, says he’s received too many complaints from women who said they felt threatened or intimidated by groups of sexually aggressive young migrant men who do not speak any of the commonly spoken European languages.
Jensen strenuously denies he is racist in any way and says the language test is designed to make sure his staff is able to communicate with customers, which sometimes includes informing them that their behavior is unacceptable.
“The challenge is that we can’t communicate with refugees, they don’t understand what I’m saying at all,” Mr. Jensen told the MailOnline. “We’ve had these challenges with all men, whatever their nationality, not only the Syrian refugees, and we’ve always had these challenges,” he continued while also noting that Danish clubs have had language rules in place in some form since 1997.
But Denmark has strict anti-discrimination laws which state that anyone in a commercial or public utility who denies service to anyone due to their race, color, national or ethnic origin, religion or sexual orientation, can be fined or even imprisoned for up to six months.
Jensen says bring it on. He’s not planning on changing his policy and said he’d rather go to prison. It’s unclear if Jensen is actually breaking the law by instituting a language test which is, according to the club, designed to enhance safety measures. A police spokesperson quoted in the MailOnline said he didn’t know if ‘language’ falls under the ‘nationality’ clause in the law and legal experts may have to rule on this issue.
----------------------------------------­---------------------
Welcome to TomoNews, where we animate the most entertaining news on the internets. Come here for an animated look at viral headlines, US news, celebrity gossip, salacious scandals, dumb criminals and much more! Subscribe now for daily news animations that will knock your socks off.
Visit our official website for all the latest, uncensored videos: http://us.tomonews.net
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-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: "Crying dog breaks the internet’s heart — but this sad dog story has a happy ending"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4prKTN9bYQc
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

17:56

Migrants and Refugees: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)

Migrants and Refugees: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)

Migrants and Refugees: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)

Millions of migrants seeking asylum in Europe face hostility, racism, and red tape. John Oliver does one admittedly tiny thing for one of them.
Connect with Last Week Tonight online...
Subscribe to the Last Week Tonight YouTube channel for more almost news as it almost happens: www.youtube.com/user/LastWeekTonight
Find Last Week Tonight on Facebook like your mom would:
http://Facebook.com/LastWeekTonight
Follow us on Twitter for news about jokes and jokes about news:
http://Twitter.com/LastWeekTonight
Visit our official site for all that other stuff at once:
http://www.hbo.com/lastweektonight

Hundreds of migrants broke through Hungarian police lines near the Serbian border on Monday and marched north on the main highway to Budapest as authorities once again were overwhelmed by the human tide passing through Hungary.
Police repeatedly tried to form lines blocking roadways around a migrant-holding centre near the border village of Roszke.
But the asylum seekers vastly outnumbered police and were able to go around authorities, racing through farm fields to reach the M5 motorway which runs from Serbia into Hungary.
The birthday of the Hindu deityKrishna was celebrated in Mumbai on Sunday with the annual Dahi Handi festival.
The tradition involves participants, known as govindas, forming a human pyramid to reach a pot filled with curd hanging above the ground.
Hindu legend says that Lord Krishna used to like butter and curd, and formed pyramids with his friends in order to steal the pots.
Although an annual tradition, local authorities have limited the height at which the pots can be tied, as injuries have been known to take place.
Find out more about AP Archive: http://tinyurl.com/neh3pb4
Story number for this item is: 4003108

4:00

Changing the debate: video animation on the impact of immigration on the UK

Changing the debate: video animation on the impact of immigration on the UK

Changing the debate: video animation on the impact of immigration on the UK

Opinion polls have shown for some time that the public sees immigration as one of the most important issues facing Britain (Ipsos Mori, 2015). At the same time, public understanding of evidence on the economic impacts of immigration is poor and strongly influenced by the media. This in turn affects the quality and content of public debate and the policy formulation process. This video presents evidence of the economic benefits of immigration to the UK and to London, but acknowledges that there has been some impact on pay, and that there are ‘winners and losers’. It is targeted at a wide audience who lack accurate information about migration impacts from which to form their opinions. It is intended to stimulate thinking and debate.
For details of the sources used in this video, please visit the NIESR website here: http://tinyurl.com/j5e47nd

2:04

Germany: PEGIDA make human-wall to 'stop migrants' at Czech border

Germany: PEGIDA make human-wall to 'stop migrants' at Czech border

Germany: PEGIDA make human-wall to 'stop migrants' at Czech border

Hundreds of PEGIDA (Patriotic EuropeansAgainst the Islamisation of the West) supporters, as well as right-wing Czech activists, gathered at Schirnding municipality at the German-Czech border to form a 'human wall' in protest against a record influx of refugees and migrants coming to both EU countries.
Video ID: 20151108-076
Video on Demand: http://www.ruptly.tv
Contact: cd@ruptly.tv
Twitter: http://twitter.com/Ruptly
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/Ruptly
LiveLeak: http://www.liveleak.com/c/Ruptly
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2:29

Group of migrants depart for Finland, Sweden

Group of migrants depart for Finland, Sweden

Group of migrants depart for Finland, Sweden

(21 Oct 2015) A group of 68 refugees flew from Italy bound for Sweden and Finland on Wednesday as part of the first phase of the European Union's relocation plan.
The 49 Eritreans and 19 Syrians took off from Rome's Ciampino Airport and will land at Finland's Kemi-Tornio airport, before some are then moved on to Sweden.
One Syrian refugee said he was "very happy" to be part of the first to make the trip.
According to the International Organisation for Migrants Finland has agreed to take 3,200 over two years form Italy and Greece.
In this first test phase they are taking 400.
The Italian government has said it hopes the relocation process will become more frequent with around 100 refugees departing each day.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/5b470909ca684dbc0d072388159219ee
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

12:58

Migrants trying to enter the U.S. are trapped in Tijuana

Migrants trying to enter the U.S. are trapped in Tijuana

Migrants trying to enter the U.S. are trapped in Tijuana

Tens of thousands of migrants from around the world are stranded in Tijuana, Mexico as they try to make it across the border to the United States.
The United States has long been known for welcoming immigrants from around the globe - from refugees fleeing war to opportunity seekers looking for a better quality of life.
These days many migrants attempting to enter the U.S. say they feel like they're being pushed away rather than embraced.
One city bordering the United States that has seen the arrival of an estimated 30-thousand migrants in the last two years is Tijuana. There are more than 30 shelters that house just the migrants from Haiti alone. In fact, one local pastor and his wife have donated land to them with the hope it will become Mexico’s first “Little Haiti.”
Check out Mike Kirsch’s package for “Americas Now” to find out more about these migrants and their life in limbo.
Watch CGTN LIVE on your computer, tablet or mobile
http://america.cgtn.com/livenews
Subscribe to CGTN America on YouTube
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25:31

Talk to Al Jazeera - Hispanic Migrants: Back to Square One

Talk to Al Jazeera - Hispanic Migrants: Back to Square One

Talk to Al Jazeera - Hispanic Migrants: Back to Square One

El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala form what is known as Central America's "NorthernTriangle". The region is overrun by organised crime and gangs, resulting from violent civil wars that rocked the three countries in the 1980s.
According to a report from the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), over 137,000 people from the Northern Triangle entered the US last year, up until June alone. Figures show that hundreds of thousands of men, women and children continue to try and flee poverty and violence in an attempt to reach the United States at any price.
Contrary to claims made by the Trump administration, the number of undocumented migrants from Mexico has fallen in the last few years. However, it is the Central Americans who are increasingly attempting to cross the border, especially from El Salvador.
El Salvador has the highest murder rate in the world, and according to the 2016 El Salvador Crime and SafetyReport conducted by the US Overseas Security Advisory Council, almost one quarter of all Salvadorans were victims of crime in 2015. Salvadorans travel by land across Guatemala into Mexico - arguably the most dangerous part of the journey - where countless migrants are robbed, kidnapped, raped and/or killed by Mexican criminal gangs that control the route.
Since PresidentDonald Trump renewed his vow to build an impenetrable wall to keep undocumented migrants out, traffickers - commonly known as "coyotes" - have raised their fees, trying to cash in on desperation to reach the land of the American dream before its too late.
In 2014 President Barack Obama approved a special refugee reunification program to discourage tens of thousands of Central American children from risking their lives to join undocumented parents in the US. The program was set to give these children refugee status - the Trump administration has since stopped the scheme in its tracks, raising concerns of a new wave of unaccompanied minors trying to reach the border.
Talk to Al Jazeera travels to El Salvador to see what is driving the migration wave and at what price.
More from Talk To Al Jazeera on:
YouTube - http://aje.io/ttajYT
Facebook - http://facebook.com/talktoaj
Twitter - http://twitter.com/talktoaljazeera
Website - http://www.aljazeera.com/talktojazeera/

6:51

Are Indian migrants treated well in New Zealand??

Are Indian migrants treated well in New Zealand??

Are Indian migrants treated well in New Zealand??

For more info on NZ education and migration, fill this form - https://docs.google.com/a/ajv.kiwi/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSevIZ_ActZ52AihpbD54qRdsTenSIUS3_kWW_73afJ_ze-UWA/viewform
Or join - https://www.facebook.com/groups/NZOptions/

11:58

UK Immigration News 19th August 2017

UK Immigration News 19th August 2017

UK Immigration News 19th August 2017

ImmigrationLaws of the UK is frequently changing, which is very important for migrant community and all of us.
I tried to collect all the latest immigration news regularly.
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1. Home Office backs down on nearly 13,000 immigration appeals in five years
http://www.thenational.scot/news/15472962.Home_Office_backs_down_on_nearly_13_000_immigration_appeals_in_five_years/
2. 'Migrant ass kissers get tae f***': Racist thugs scrawl graffiti on Govanhill Baths
http://www.eveningtimes.co.uk/news/15474712._Migrant_ass_kissers_get_tae_f______Racist_thugs_scrawl_graffiti_on_Govanhill_Baths/
3. EU Migrants Can Enter UK WithoutBorder Checks After Brexit, Government Confirms
http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/eu-migrants-brexit-ireland-border_uk_5994240ce4b0e789a948370a
4. Children's Society says lone migrant children cut off from justice due to legal aid cuts
http://www.ein.org.uk/news/childrens-society-says-lone-migrant-children-cut-justice-due-legal-aid-cuts-and-soaring-fees
5. ‘We'll be sovereign!’ Tory says Brexit means migrants will come to UK 'for right reasons'
http://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/842938/Brexit-migrants-eu-uk-right-reasons-Tory-MP-Andrew-Bridgen-benefits-european-union-video
6. The Rise Of White Nationalism And Anti-Immigration Bias
http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/meriam-sabih/uk-and-anti-immigration-s_b_17478932.html
7. Home Office shrugs off dreadful asylum living conditions
http://camdennewjournal.com/article/home-office-shrugs-off-dreadful-asylum-living-conditions
8. Ruth Davidson calls for government to review immigration target
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2017/aug/08/ruth-davidson-government-review-immigration-target-scottish-conservative
9. Hiring refugees: 'we have an amazing wealth of talent on our hands'
https://www.theguardian.com/small-business-network/2017/aug/11/hiring-refugees-amazing-wealth-talent-barriers-entrepreneurs
10. Syrians can now upgrade to full refugee status: new form issued
https://www.freemovement.org.uk/syrians-can-now-upgrade-full-refugee-status-new-form-issued/
11. Virtual hearings to be trialled in immigration tribunal from October 2017
https://www.freemovement.org.uk/virtual-hearings-trialled-immigration-tribunal-october-2017/
12. Study finds asylum judges fail to assist vulnerable appellants
https://www.freemovement.org.uk/study-finds-asylum-judges-fail-assist-vulnerable-appellants/
13. A genuine couple can enter in a marriage of convenience, says High Court
https://www.freemovement.org.uk/genuine-couple-can-enter-marriage-convenience-says-high-court/
14. Upper Tribunal provides guidance in cases of judicial bias
https://www.freemovement.org.uk/upper-tribunal-provides-guidance-cases-judicial-bias/
15. EU migrants barred from claiming benefits after Brexit as Theresa May revives David Cameron pledge
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/08/17/eu-migrants-barred-claiming-benefits-brexit-theresa-may-revives/
16. We Need A Fairer Immigration System For Young People Who Have Grown Up In The UK
http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/kamena-dorling/immigration-young-people_b_17729938.html
17. Theresa May’s immigration target is leaving her increasingly isolated
http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/brexit-theresa-may-immigration-leaving-her-isolated-a7896636.html
18. Immigration officials branded "racist" after Uganda's Queen of TV denied visa to enter UK
http://www.heraldscotland.com/news/15477075.Immigration_officials_branded__racist__after_Uganda_s_Queen_of_TV_denied_visa_to_enter_UK/
19. EU citizens ‘WILL be free to live in Britain after Brexit but will need permits to work under new Home Office immigration plans’
https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/4260616/eu-citizens-free-travel-britain-brexit-work-permits-home-office-immigration/

SOENDERBORG, DENMARK — Danish nightclub owner Tom HoldenJensen says he’d rather go to prison than overturn a “language test” he instituted.
Jensen is demanding that those who wish to enter his establishment must speak either Danish, German or English. Jensen, who runs the Buddy Holly club in Soenderborg, says he’s received too many complaints from women who said they felt threatened or intimidated by groups of sexually aggressive young migrant men who do not speak any of the commonly spoken European languages.
Jensen strenuously denies he is racist in any way and says the language test is designed to make sure his staff is able to communicate with customers, which sometimes includes informing them that their behavior is unacceptable.
“The challenge is that we can’t communicate with ...

published: 30 Jan 2016

Migrants and Refugees: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)

Millions of migrants seeking asylum in Europe face hostility, racism, and red tape. John Oliver does one admittedly tiny thing for one of them.
Connect with Last Week Tonight online...
Subscribe to the Last Week Tonight YouTube channel for more almost news as it almost happens: www.youtube.com/user/LastWeekTonight
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Hundreds of migrants broke through Hungarian police lines near the Serbian border on Monday and marched north on the main highway to Budapest as authorities once again were overwhelmed by the human tide passing through Hungary.
Police repeatedly tried to form lines blocking roadways around a migrant-holding centre near the border village of Roszke.
But the asylum seekers vastly outnumbered police and were able to go around authorities, racing through farm fields to reach the M5 motorway which runs from Serbia into Hungary.
The birthday of the Hindu deityKrishna was celebrated in Mumbai on Sunday with the annual Dahi Handi festival.
The tradition involves participants, known as govindas, forming a human pyramid to reach a pot filled with curd hanging above the ground.
Hindu legend sa...

published: 16 Sep 2015

Changing the debate: video animation on the impact of immigration on the UK

Opinion polls have shown for some time that the public sees immigration as one of the most important issues facing Britain (Ipsos Mori, 2015). At the same time, public understanding of evidence on the economic impacts of immigration is poor and strongly influenced by the media. This in turn affects the quality and content of public debate and the policy formulation process. This video presents evidence of the economic benefits of immigration to the UK and to London, but acknowledges that there has been some impact on pay, and that there are ‘winners and losers’. It is targeted at a wide audience who lack accurate information about migration impacts from which to form their opinions. It is intended to stimulate thinking and debate.
For details of the sources used in this video, please visi...

published: 08 Feb 2016

Germany: PEGIDA make human-wall to 'stop migrants' at Czech border

Hundreds of PEGIDA (Patriotic EuropeansAgainst the Islamisation of the West) supporters, as well as right-wing Czech activists, gathered at Schirnding municipality at the German-Czech border to form a 'human wall' in protest against a record influx of refugees and migrants coming to both EU countries.
Video ID: 20151108-076
Video on Demand: http://www.ruptly.tv
Contact: cd@ruptly.tv
Twitter: http://twitter.com/Ruptly
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/Ruptly
LiveLeak: http://www.liveleak.com/c/Ruptly
Vine: https://vine.co/Ruptly
Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/Ruptly
YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/user/RuptlyTV
DailyMotion: http://www.dailymotion.com/ruptly

published: 08 Nov 2015

Group of migrants depart for Finland, Sweden

(21 Oct 2015) A group of 68 refugees flew from Italy bound for Sweden and Finland on Wednesday as part of the first phase of the European Union's relocation plan.
The 49 Eritreans and 19 Syrians took off from Rome's Ciampino Airport and will land at Finland's Kemi-Tornio airport, before some are then moved on to Sweden.
One Syrian refugee said he was "very happy" to be part of the first to make the trip.
According to the International Organisation for Migrants Finland has agreed to take 3,200 over two years form Italy and Greece.
In this first test phase they are taking 400.
The Italian government has said it hopes the relocation process will become more frequent with around 100 refugees departing each day.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/...

published: 17 Nov 2016

Migrants trying to enter the U.S. are trapped in Tijuana

Tens of thousands of migrants from around the world are stranded in Tijuana, Mexico as they try to make it across the border to the United States.
The United States has long been known for welcoming immigrants from around the globe - from refugees fleeing war to opportunity seekers looking for a better quality of life.
These days many migrants attempting to enter the U.S. say they feel like they're being pushed away rather than embraced.
One city bordering the United States that has seen the arrival of an estimated 30-thousand migrants in the last two years is Tijuana. There are more than 30 shelters that house just the migrants from Haiti alone. In fact, one local pastor and his wife have donated land to them with the hope it will become Mexico’s first “Little Haiti.”
Check out MikeK...

published: 05 Nov 2017

Talk to Al Jazeera - Hispanic Migrants: Back to Square One

El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala form what is known as Central America's "NorthernTriangle". The region is overrun by organised crime and gangs, resulting from violent civil wars that rocked the three countries in the 1980s.
According to a report from the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), over 137,000 people from the Northern Triangle entered the US last year, up until June alone. Figures show that hundreds of thousands of men, women and children continue to try and flee poverty and violence in an attempt to reach the United States at any price.
Contrary to claims made by the Trump administration, the number of undocumented migrants from Mexico has fallen in the last few years. However, it is the Central Americans who are increasingly attempting to cross the border, especial...

published: 18 Feb 2017

Are Indian migrants treated well in New Zealand??

For more info on NZ education and migration, fill this form - https://docs.google.com/a/ajv.kiwi/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSevIZ_ActZ52AihpbD54qRdsTenSIUS3_kWW_73afJ_ze-UWA/viewform
Or join - https://www.facebook.com/groups/NZOptions/

published: 04 Jan 2017

UK Immigration News 19th August 2017

ImmigrationLaws of the UK is frequently changing, which is very important for migrant community and all of us.
I tried to collect all the latest immigration news regularly.
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SOENDERBORG, DENMARK — Danish nightclub owner Tom HoldenJensen says he’d rather go to prison than overturn a “language test” he instituted.
Jensen is demanding that those who wish to enter his establishment must speak either Danish, German or English. Jensen, who runs the Buddy Holly club in Soenderborg, says he’s received too many complaints from women who said they felt threatened or intimidated by groups of sexually aggressive young migrant men who do not speak any of the commonly spoken European languages.
Jensen strenuously denies he is racist in any way and says the language test is designed to make sure his staff is able to communicate with customers, which sometimes includes informing them that their behavior is unacceptable.
“The challenge is that we can’t communicate with refugees, they don’t understand what I’m saying at all,” Mr. Jensen told the MailOnline. “We’ve had these challenges with all men, whatever their nationality, not only the Syrian refugees, and we’ve always had these challenges,” he continued while also noting that Danish clubs have had language rules in place in some form since 1997.
But Denmark has strict anti-discrimination laws which state that anyone in a commercial or public utility who denies service to anyone due to their race, color, national or ethnic origin, religion or sexual orientation, can be fined or even imprisoned for up to six months.
Jensen says bring it on. He’s not planning on changing his policy and said he’d rather go to prison. It’s unclear if Jensen is actually breaking the law by instituting a language test which is, according to the club, designed to enhance safety measures. A police spokesperson quoted in the MailOnline said he didn’t know if ‘language’ falls under the ‘nationality’ clause in the law and legal experts may have to rule on this issue.
----------------------------------------­---------------------
Welcome to TomoNews, where we animate the most entertaining news on the internets. Come here for an animated look at viral headlines, US news, celebrity gossip, salacious scandals, dumb criminals and much more! Subscribe now for daily news animations that will knock your socks off.
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Please watch: "Crying dog breaks the internet’s heart — but this sad dog story has a happy ending"
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SOENDERBORG, DENMARK — Danish nightclub owner Tom HoldenJensen says he’d rather go to prison than overturn a “language test” he instituted.
Jensen is demanding that those who wish to enter his establishment must speak either Danish, German or English. Jensen, who runs the Buddy Holly club in Soenderborg, says he’s received too many complaints from women who said they felt threatened or intimidated by groups of sexually aggressive young migrant men who do not speak any of the commonly spoken European languages.
Jensen strenuously denies he is racist in any way and says the language test is designed to make sure his staff is able to communicate with customers, which sometimes includes informing them that their behavior is unacceptable.
“The challenge is that we can’t communicate with refugees, they don’t understand what I’m saying at all,” Mr. Jensen told the MailOnline. “We’ve had these challenges with all men, whatever their nationality, not only the Syrian refugees, and we’ve always had these challenges,” he continued while also noting that Danish clubs have had language rules in place in some form since 1997.
But Denmark has strict anti-discrimination laws which state that anyone in a commercial or public utility who denies service to anyone due to their race, color, national or ethnic origin, religion or sexual orientation, can be fined or even imprisoned for up to six months.
Jensen says bring it on. He’s not planning on changing his policy and said he’d rather go to prison. It’s unclear if Jensen is actually breaking the law by instituting a language test which is, according to the club, designed to enhance safety measures. A police spokesperson quoted in the MailOnline said he didn’t know if ‘language’ falls under the ‘nationality’ clause in the law and legal experts may have to rule on this issue.
----------------------------------------­---------------------
Welcome to TomoNews, where we animate the most entertaining news on the internets. Come here for an animated look at viral headlines, US news, celebrity gossip, salacious scandals, dumb criminals and much more! Subscribe now for daily news animations that will knock your socks off.
Visit our official website for all the latest, uncensored videos: http://us.tomonews.net
Check out our Android app: http://bit.ly/1rddhCj
Check out our iOS app: http://bit.ly/1gO3z1f
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-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: "Crying dog breaks the internet’s heart — but this sad dog story has a happy ending"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4prKTN9bYQc
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

Millions of migrants seeking asylum in Europe face hostility, racism, and red tape. John Oliver does one admittedly tiny thing for one of them.
Connect with Last Week Tonight online...
Subscribe to the Last Week Tonight YouTube channel for more almost news as it almost happens: www.youtube.com/user/LastWeekTonight
Find Last Week Tonight on Facebook like your mom would:
http://Facebook.com/LastWeekTonight
Follow us on Twitter for news about jokes and jokes about news:
http://Twitter.com/LastWeekTonight
Visit our official site for all that other stuff at once:
http://www.hbo.com/lastweektonight

Millions of migrants seeking asylum in Europe face hostility, racism, and red tape. John Oliver does one admittedly tiny thing for one of them.
Connect with Last Week Tonight online...
Subscribe to the Last Week Tonight YouTube channel for more almost news as it almost happens: www.youtube.com/user/LastWeekTonight
Find Last Week Tonight on Facebook like your mom would:
http://Facebook.com/LastWeekTonight
Follow us on Twitter for news about jokes and jokes about news:
http://Twitter.com/LastWeekTonight
Visit our official site for all that other stuff at once:
http://www.hbo.com/lastweektonight

Hundreds of migrants broke through Hungarian police lines near the Serbian border on Monday and marched north on the main highway to Budapest as authorities once again were overwhelmed by the human tide passing through Hungary.
Police repeatedly tried to form lines blocking roadways around a migrant-holding centre near the border village of Roszke.
But the asylum seekers vastly outnumbered police and were able to go around authorities, racing through farm fields to reach the M5 motorway which runs from Serbia into Hungary.
The birthday of the Hindu deityKrishna was celebrated in Mumbai on Sunday with the annual Dahi Handi festival.
The tradition involves participants, known as govindas, forming a human pyramid to reach a pot filled with curd hanging above the ground.
Hindu legend says that Lord Krishna used to like butter and curd, and formed pyramids with his friends in order to steal the pots.
Although an annual tradition, local authorities have limited the height at which the pots can be tied, as injuries have been known to take place.
Find out more about AP Archive: http://tinyurl.com/neh3pb4
Story number for this item is: 4003108

Hundreds of migrants broke through Hungarian police lines near the Serbian border on Monday and marched north on the main highway to Budapest as authorities once again were overwhelmed by the human tide passing through Hungary.
Police repeatedly tried to form lines blocking roadways around a migrant-holding centre near the border village of Roszke.
But the asylum seekers vastly outnumbered police and were able to go around authorities, racing through farm fields to reach the M5 motorway which runs from Serbia into Hungary.
The birthday of the Hindu deityKrishna was celebrated in Mumbai on Sunday with the annual Dahi Handi festival.
The tradition involves participants, known as govindas, forming a human pyramid to reach a pot filled with curd hanging above the ground.
Hindu legend says that Lord Krishna used to like butter and curd, and formed pyramids with his friends in order to steal the pots.
Although an annual tradition, local authorities have limited the height at which the pots can be tied, as injuries have been known to take place.
Find out more about AP Archive: http://tinyurl.com/neh3pb4
Story number for this item is: 4003108

published:16 Sep 2015

views:24536

back

Changing the debate: video animation on the impact of immigration on the UK

Opinion polls have shown for some time that the public sees immigration as one of the most important issues facing Britain (Ipsos Mori, 2015). At the same time, public understanding of evidence on the economic impacts of immigration is poor and strongly influenced by the media. This in turn affects the quality and content of public debate and the policy formulation process. This video presents evidence of the economic benefits of immigration to the UK and to London, but acknowledges that there has been some impact on pay, and that there are ‘winners and losers’. It is targeted at a wide audience who lack accurate information about migration impacts from which to form their opinions. It is intended to stimulate thinking and debate.
For details of the sources used in this video, please visit the NIESR website here: http://tinyurl.com/j5e47nd

Opinion polls have shown for some time that the public sees immigration as one of the most important issues facing Britain (Ipsos Mori, 2015). At the same time, public understanding of evidence on the economic impacts of immigration is poor and strongly influenced by the media. This in turn affects the quality and content of public debate and the policy formulation process. This video presents evidence of the economic benefits of immigration to the UK and to London, but acknowledges that there has been some impact on pay, and that there are ‘winners and losers’. It is targeted at a wide audience who lack accurate information about migration impacts from which to form their opinions. It is intended to stimulate thinking and debate.
For details of the sources used in this video, please visit the NIESR website here: http://tinyurl.com/j5e47nd

Hundreds of PEGIDA (Patriotic EuropeansAgainst the Islamisation of the West) supporters, as well as right-wing Czech activists, gathered at Schirnding municipality at the German-Czech border to form a 'human wall' in protest against a record influx of refugees and migrants coming to both EU countries.
Video ID: 20151108-076
Video on Demand: http://www.ruptly.tv
Contact: cd@ruptly.tv
Twitter: http://twitter.com/Ruptly
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/Ruptly
LiveLeak: http://www.liveleak.com/c/Ruptly
Vine: https://vine.co/Ruptly
Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/Ruptly
YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/user/RuptlyTV
DailyMotion: http://www.dailymotion.com/ruptly

Hundreds of PEGIDA (Patriotic EuropeansAgainst the Islamisation of the West) supporters, as well as right-wing Czech activists, gathered at Schirnding municipality at the German-Czech border to form a 'human wall' in protest against a record influx of refugees and migrants coming to both EU countries.
Video ID: 20151108-076
Video on Demand: http://www.ruptly.tv
Contact: cd@ruptly.tv
Twitter: http://twitter.com/Ruptly
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/Ruptly
LiveLeak: http://www.liveleak.com/c/Ruptly
Vine: https://vine.co/Ruptly
Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/Ruptly
YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/user/RuptlyTV
DailyMotion: http://www.dailymotion.com/ruptly

(21 Oct 2015) A group of 68 refugees flew from Italy bound for Sweden and Finland on Wednesday as part of the first phase of the European Union's relocation plan.
The 49 Eritreans and 19 Syrians took off from Rome's Ciampino Airport and will land at Finland's Kemi-Tornio airport, before some are then moved on to Sweden.
One Syrian refugee said he was "very happy" to be part of the first to make the trip.
According to the International Organisation for Migrants Finland has agreed to take 3,200 over two years form Italy and Greece.
In this first test phase they are taking 400.
The Italian government has said it hopes the relocation process will become more frequent with around 100 refugees departing each day.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/5b470909ca684dbc0d072388159219ee
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

(21 Oct 2015) A group of 68 refugees flew from Italy bound for Sweden and Finland on Wednesday as part of the first phase of the European Union's relocation plan.
The 49 Eritreans and 19 Syrians took off from Rome's Ciampino Airport and will land at Finland's Kemi-Tornio airport, before some are then moved on to Sweden.
One Syrian refugee said he was "very happy" to be part of the first to make the trip.
According to the International Organisation for Migrants Finland has agreed to take 3,200 over two years form Italy and Greece.
In this first test phase they are taking 400.
The Italian government has said it hopes the relocation process will become more frequent with around 100 refugees departing each day.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/5b470909ca684dbc0d072388159219ee
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

Tens of thousands of migrants from around the world are stranded in Tijuana, Mexico as they try to make it across the border to the United States.
The United States has long been known for welcoming immigrants from around the globe - from refugees fleeing war to opportunity seekers looking for a better quality of life.
These days many migrants attempting to enter the U.S. say they feel like they're being pushed away rather than embraced.
One city bordering the United States that has seen the arrival of an estimated 30-thousand migrants in the last two years is Tijuana. There are more than 30 shelters that house just the migrants from Haiti alone. In fact, one local pastor and his wife have donated land to them with the hope it will become Mexico’s first “Little Haiti.”
Check out Mike Kirsch’s package for “Americas Now” to find out more about these migrants and their life in limbo.
Watch CGTN LIVE on your computer, tablet or mobile
http://america.cgtn.com/livenews
Subscribe to CGTN America on YouTube
Follow CGTN America:
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Facebook: @cgtnamerica
Google+: CctvamericaTvnews
»» Watch CGTN ««
Washington, DC (and greater area)
• MHz - Channel 3
• COMCAST (Xfinity) - Channel 273
• FIOS - Channel 277
New York City
• Time Warner - Channel 134
• FiOS (Verizon) - Channel 277
Los Angeles
• Charter Cable - Channel 562
• Time Warner - Channel 155
SatelliteNationwide
• DISH TV - Channel 279

Tens of thousands of migrants from around the world are stranded in Tijuana, Mexico as they try to make it across the border to the United States.
The United States has long been known for welcoming immigrants from around the globe - from refugees fleeing war to opportunity seekers looking for a better quality of life.
These days many migrants attempting to enter the U.S. say they feel like they're being pushed away rather than embraced.
One city bordering the United States that has seen the arrival of an estimated 30-thousand migrants in the last two years is Tijuana. There are more than 30 shelters that house just the migrants from Haiti alone. In fact, one local pastor and his wife have donated land to them with the hope it will become Mexico’s first “Little Haiti.”
Check out Mike Kirsch’s package for “Americas Now” to find out more about these migrants and their life in limbo.
Watch CGTN LIVE on your computer, tablet or mobile
http://america.cgtn.com/livenews
Subscribe to CGTN America on YouTube
Follow CGTN America:
Twitter: @cgtnamerica
Facebook: @cgtnamerica
Google+: CctvamericaTvnews
»» Watch CGTN ««
Washington, DC (and greater area)
• MHz - Channel 3
• COMCAST (Xfinity) - Channel 273
• FIOS - Channel 277
New York City
• Time Warner - Channel 134
• FiOS (Verizon) - Channel 277
Los Angeles
• Charter Cable - Channel 562
• Time Warner - Channel 155
SatelliteNationwide
• DISH TV - Channel 279

El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala form what is known as Central America's "NorthernTriangle". The region is overrun by organised crime and gangs, resulting from violent civil wars that rocked the three countries in the 1980s.
According to a report from the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), over 137,000 people from the Northern Triangle entered the US last year, up until June alone. Figures show that hundreds of thousands of men, women and children continue to try and flee poverty and violence in an attempt to reach the United States at any price.
Contrary to claims made by the Trump administration, the number of undocumented migrants from Mexico has fallen in the last few years. However, it is the Central Americans who are increasingly attempting to cross the border, especially from El Salvador.
El Salvador has the highest murder rate in the world, and according to the 2016 El Salvador Crime and SafetyReport conducted by the US Overseas Security Advisory Council, almost one quarter of all Salvadorans were victims of crime in 2015. Salvadorans travel by land across Guatemala into Mexico - arguably the most dangerous part of the journey - where countless migrants are robbed, kidnapped, raped and/or killed by Mexican criminal gangs that control the route.
Since PresidentDonald Trump renewed his vow to build an impenetrable wall to keep undocumented migrants out, traffickers - commonly known as "coyotes" - have raised their fees, trying to cash in on desperation to reach the land of the American dream before its too late.
In 2014 President Barack Obama approved a special refugee reunification program to discourage tens of thousands of Central American children from risking their lives to join undocumented parents in the US. The program was set to give these children refugee status - the Trump administration has since stopped the scheme in its tracks, raising concerns of a new wave of unaccompanied minors trying to reach the border.
Talk to Al Jazeera travels to El Salvador to see what is driving the migration wave and at what price.
More from Talk To Al Jazeera on:
YouTube - http://aje.io/ttajYT
Facebook - http://facebook.com/talktoaj
Twitter - http://twitter.com/talktoaljazeera
Website - http://www.aljazeera.com/talktojazeera/

El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala form what is known as Central America's "NorthernTriangle". The region is overrun by organised crime and gangs, resulting from violent civil wars that rocked the three countries in the 1980s.
According to a report from the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), over 137,000 people from the Northern Triangle entered the US last year, up until June alone. Figures show that hundreds of thousands of men, women and children continue to try and flee poverty and violence in an attempt to reach the United States at any price.
Contrary to claims made by the Trump administration, the number of undocumented migrants from Mexico has fallen in the last few years. However, it is the Central Americans who are increasingly attempting to cross the border, especially from El Salvador.
El Salvador has the highest murder rate in the world, and according to the 2016 El Salvador Crime and SafetyReport conducted by the US Overseas Security Advisory Council, almost one quarter of all Salvadorans were victims of crime in 2015. Salvadorans travel by land across Guatemala into Mexico - arguably the most dangerous part of the journey - where countless migrants are robbed, kidnapped, raped and/or killed by Mexican criminal gangs that control the route.
Since PresidentDonald Trump renewed his vow to build an impenetrable wall to keep undocumented migrants out, traffickers - commonly known as "coyotes" - have raised their fees, trying to cash in on desperation to reach the land of the American dream before its too late.
In 2014 President Barack Obama approved a special refugee reunification program to discourage tens of thousands of Central American children from risking their lives to join undocumented parents in the US. The program was set to give these children refugee status - the Trump administration has since stopped the scheme in its tracks, raising concerns of a new wave of unaccompanied minors trying to reach the border.
Talk to Al Jazeera travels to El Salvador to see what is driving the migration wave and at what price.
More from Talk To Al Jazeera on:
YouTube - http://aje.io/ttajYT
Facebook - http://facebook.com/talktoaj
Twitter - http://twitter.com/talktoaljazeera
Website - http://www.aljazeera.com/talktojazeera/

Are Indian migrants treated well in New Zealand??

For more info on NZ education and migration, fill this form - https://docs.google.com/a/ajv.kiwi/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSevIZ_ActZ52AihpbD54qRdsTenSIUS3_kWW_73afJ_ze-...

For more info on NZ education and migration, fill this form - https://docs.google.com/a/ajv.kiwi/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSevIZ_ActZ52AihpbD54qRdsTenSIUS3_kWW_73afJ_ze-UWA/viewform
Or join - https://www.facebook.com/groups/NZOptions/

For more info on NZ education and migration, fill this form - https://docs.google.com/a/ajv.kiwi/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSevIZ_ActZ52AihpbD54qRdsTenSIUS3_kWW_73afJ_ze-UWA/viewform
Or join - https://www.facebook.com/groups/NZOptions/

BJP will form a "Migrants Commission" for the people who migrate to Delhi: Shri Rajnath Singh

published: 29 Nov 2013

Libya’s Migrant Trade: Europe or Die (Full Length)

In a desperate bid to seek a better life in Europe, thousands of refugees and migrants leave the shores ofLibya and cross the perilous Mediterranean Sea every month. Over 2,000 people have died making the journey in 2015 alone.
The routes to and journey through Libya are also dangerous, however, and since the fall of Muammar Qaddafi in 2011, the country has struggled to achieve and maintain stability. Porous desert borders, rival fighters, and weak governance have left much of Libya in complete chaos.
With militias controlling large swathes of land, their attentions have turned to the people that cross their territories. The fighters assert they are bringing order to the country as they detain the refugees, yet these people’s lives have become valuable commodities to the militias as th...

published: 17 Sep 2015

Migration to Australia (Skilled Migration)

*** IMPORTANT *** Please don't raise questions here. For further help please complete the free assessment form at www.anzmigrate.com and for questions please email info@anzmigrate.com
A detailed introduction to the skilled migration program discussing aspects of the system, key requirements and the steps involved including maintaining the PR after it has been issued. An important introduction for anyone considering skilled migration to Australia.

published: 02 May 2015

Talk to Al Jazeera - Hispanic Migrants: Back to Square One

El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala form what is known as Central America's "NorthernTriangle". The region is overrun by organised crime and gangs, resulting from violent civil wars that rocked the three countries in the 1980s.
According to a report from the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), over 137,000 people from the Northern Triangle entered the US last year, up until June alone. Figures show that hundreds of thousands of men, women and children continue to try and flee poverty and violence in an attempt to reach the United States at any price.
Contrary to claims made by the Trump administration, the number of undocumented migrants from Mexico has fallen in the last few years. However, it is the Central Americans who are increasingly attempting to cross the border, especial...

published: 18 Feb 2017

Detained by Militias: Libya's Migrant Trade (Part 1)

In a desperate bid to seek a better life in Europe, thousands of refugees and migrants leave the shores of Libya and cross the perilous Mediterranean Sea every month. Over 2,000 people have died making the journey in 2015 alone.
The routes to and journey through Libya are also dangerous, however, and since the fall of Muammar Qaddafi in 2011, the country has struggled to achieve and maintain stability. Porous desert borders, rival fighters, and weak governance have left much of Libya in complete chaos.
With militias controlling large swathes of land, their attentions have turned to the people that cross their territories. The fighters assert they are bringing order to the country as they detain the refugees, yet these people’s lives have become valuable commodities to the militias as th...

published: 15 Sep 2015

Crossing Mexico's Other Border

When traveling from Central America to the United States through Mexico, immigrants are forced to battle drug cartels, corrupt police officers, and human traffickers, all before they even come close to the US border.
People tend to assume that the immigrants crossing the US--Mexico border are all Mexican. The reality is that a large percentage of them come from Central America, and their journey north is grueling. To get to the US, they first have to pass through Mexico, an ordeal that often ends up being even more difficult than getting into the United States. Most migrants cross into Mexico on rafts, via the Suchiate River. After that, they need to protect themselves from corrupt Mexican police, drug cartels like the infamous Zetas, and even fellow migrants. They often travel by foot an...

published: 29 Mar 2013

Let Them Come: We Have Nothing to Fear From High Levels of Immigration

http://www.intelligencesquared.com/events/we-have-nothing-to-fear-from-high-levels-of-immigration/
When the EU's transitional immigration rules expire on 1st January 2014, numerous Bulgarians and Romanians will be heading for Britain. And we should put out the welcome mat. Yes, it's true that there has been a huge fuss about this in the press, but then xenophobia sells newspapers. The truth is that like the other waves of immigrants to Britain, those coming here will overwhelmingly be people with initiative, people who want to better their prospects. And our economy needs them. Immigrants don't steal jobs from the existing British workforce: all the evidence suggests they make possible the creation of new jobs. Mass immigration has always enriched economies and cultures and never more so ...

published: 14 Oct 2013

The Truth About Immigration in the UK 2014 (BBC, HD 720p)

Did Britain need immigrants to keep economy growing?
BBC political editor Nick Robinson examines the public's anxieties about immigration and reveals the facts of an issue that has transformed British politics. With Britain braced for a new wave of migrants from eastern Europe, a subject once regarded as toxic is now at the forefront of political discussion. The programme dissects the decisions which led to the biggest surge of immigration in modern history and asks whether politicians can control immigration as much as they claim, looking at the potential consequences of their pledges.

published: 09 Jan 2014

The Spanish Dishonor Their Ancestors And Allow Migrants To Undo 300 Years Of Reconquista

Alex Jones shows how Spanish beach goers sit idly by as a rubber boat docks at the shore and unloads dozens of migrants who run inland, disappearing into the Spanish interior.
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published: 10 Aug 2017

Migration in Europe What Trends to Watch in 2018 1 31 2018 Video

Is 2018 the year that the European Union takes leadership on migration on the international stage, or where it focuses inwards on healing internal divisions and delivering on overdue migration and asylum system reforms? With two high-profile compacts on migration and refugees being negotiated by the United Nations, Europe can potentially seize the momentum to shape a new international migration framework—and fill the vacuum left by the United States’ withdrawal. But with a series of critical elections across the continent, and key states struggling to form coalition governments, Europe’s ability to set the agenda may be limited. Europe may need to first get its own house in order, passing reforms to the Dublin Regulations, hammering down citizens’ rights post-Brexit, and designing strategi...

published: 05 Feb 2018

Italy - Debate on Whether current migration destroy Europe as we know it

EU Immigration's Shocking New Trend

The EU's New Refugees: Waves of immigration have always been a source of political tension in Europe. Now, the EU is facing up to an unusual new migration worry: floods of migrants fleeing from the continent's faltering economies.
For downloads and more visit: http://www.journeyman.tv/?lid=65135&bid=2
The boom years are over, and now faltering European nations are all experiencing this new trend in emigration. In thePortuguese capital Lisbon, queues form outside African embassies as EU citizens try to acquire working visas. According to ex-pat JulianaFleming, "I know many people who are trying to sell their homes in Portugal, to settle in Mozambique". 300,000 have left Spain since the banking crisis in 2008. ChefCarlos Garcia couldn't find work in Madrid, so instead went to look in A...

MANUELA BOJADŽIJEV: „Is (neo-)racism a form of violence of the past?“

MANUELA BOJADŽIJEV: „Is (neo-)racism a form of violence of the past?“ Conjunctures of racism theory
In my talk I will address the question of violence conceptually by focussing on racism as a form of violence. I will ask how we can understand racism. The question of time in relation to racism as a form of violence is relevant. While some may argue that racism is an outdated form of violence which, albeit its recurrent return, receives no substantial renewal and is therefore to be understood as „the surviving old in the new“; others have argued that racism has proliferated to a degree that is has by now become almost ubiquitous. In order to anchor the debate I will offer a genealogy of critical racism theory in Germany, focussing on its conceptual values and guiding problematics for the fie...

Libya’s Migrant Trade: Europe or Die (Full Length)

In a desperate bid to seek a better life in Europe, thousands of refugees and migrants leave the shores ofLibya and cross the perilous Mediterranean Sea every m...

In a desperate bid to seek a better life in Europe, thousands of refugees and migrants leave the shores ofLibya and cross the perilous Mediterranean Sea every month. Over 2,000 people have died making the journey in 2015 alone.
The routes to and journey through Libya are also dangerous, however, and since the fall of Muammar Qaddafi in 2011, the country has struggled to achieve and maintain stability. Porous desert borders, rival fighters, and weak governance have left much of Libya in complete chaos.
With militias controlling large swathes of land, their attentions have turned to the people that cross their territories. The fighters assert they are bringing order to the country as they detain the refugees, yet these people’s lives have become valuable commodities to the militias as they try to solidify their positions in the country.
VICENews secured exclusive access to a camp outside Tripoli, run by a militia that has seized hundreds of migrants. Food is scarce, dehydration and disease is rife, and control comes in the form of whips and warning shots. The militia claims to have the migrants’ interests at heart, but what emerges is a very different story.
VICE News secured exclusive access to a camp outside Tripoli, run by a militia that has seized hundreds of migrants.
Watch "Stopover in Serbia: BreakingBorders (Dispatch 4)" - http://bit.ly/1JbWohd
Read "VideoShowsHungarian PoliceFiringTear Gas and WaterCannon at Migrants" - http://bit.ly/1KgXwlz
Subscribe to VICE News here: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-to-VICE-News
Check out VICE News for more: http://vicenews.com
Follow VICE News here:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/vicenews
Twitter: https://twitter.com/vicenews
Tumblr: http://vicenews.tumblr.com/
Instagram: http://instagram.com/vicenews
More videos from the VICE network: https://www.fb.com/vicevideos

In a desperate bid to seek a better life in Europe, thousands of refugees and migrants leave the shores ofLibya and cross the perilous Mediterranean Sea every month. Over 2,000 people have died making the journey in 2015 alone.
The routes to and journey through Libya are also dangerous, however, and since the fall of Muammar Qaddafi in 2011, the country has struggled to achieve and maintain stability. Porous desert borders, rival fighters, and weak governance have left much of Libya in complete chaos.
With militias controlling large swathes of land, their attentions have turned to the people that cross their territories. The fighters assert they are bringing order to the country as they detain the refugees, yet these people’s lives have become valuable commodities to the militias as they try to solidify their positions in the country.
VICENews secured exclusive access to a camp outside Tripoli, run by a militia that has seized hundreds of migrants. Food is scarce, dehydration and disease is rife, and control comes in the form of whips and warning shots. The militia claims to have the migrants’ interests at heart, but what emerges is a very different story.
VICE News secured exclusive access to a camp outside Tripoli, run by a militia that has seized hundreds of migrants.
Watch "Stopover in Serbia: BreakingBorders (Dispatch 4)" - http://bit.ly/1JbWohd
Read "VideoShowsHungarian PoliceFiringTear Gas and WaterCannon at Migrants" - http://bit.ly/1KgXwlz
Subscribe to VICE News here: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-to-VICE-News
Check out VICE News for more: http://vicenews.com
Follow VICE News here:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/vicenews
Twitter: https://twitter.com/vicenews
Tumblr: http://vicenews.tumblr.com/
Instagram: http://instagram.com/vicenews
More videos from the VICE network: https://www.fb.com/vicevideos

Migration to Australia (Skilled Migration)

*** IMPORTANT *** Please don't raise questions here. For further help please complete the free assessment form at www.anzmigrate.com and for questions please em...

*** IMPORTANT *** Please don't raise questions here. For further help please complete the free assessment form at www.anzmigrate.com and for questions please email info@anzmigrate.com
A detailed introduction to the skilled migration program discussing aspects of the system, key requirements and the steps involved including maintaining the PR after it has been issued. An important introduction for anyone considering skilled migration to Australia.

*** IMPORTANT *** Please don't raise questions here. For further help please complete the free assessment form at www.anzmigrate.com and for questions please email info@anzmigrate.com
A detailed introduction to the skilled migration program discussing aspects of the system, key requirements and the steps involved including maintaining the PR after it has been issued. An important introduction for anyone considering skilled migration to Australia.

El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala form what is known as Central America's "NorthernTriangle". The region is overrun by organised crime and gangs, resulting from violent civil wars that rocked the three countries in the 1980s.
According to a report from the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), over 137,000 people from the Northern Triangle entered the US last year, up until June alone. Figures show that hundreds of thousands of men, women and children continue to try and flee poverty and violence in an attempt to reach the United States at any price.
Contrary to claims made by the Trump administration, the number of undocumented migrants from Mexico has fallen in the last few years. However, it is the Central Americans who are increasingly attempting to cross the border, especially from El Salvador.
El Salvador has the highest murder rate in the world, and according to the 2016 El Salvador Crime and SafetyReport conducted by the US Overseas Security Advisory Council, almost one quarter of all Salvadorans were victims of crime in 2015. Salvadorans travel by land across Guatemala into Mexico - arguably the most dangerous part of the journey - where countless migrants are robbed, kidnapped, raped and/or killed by Mexican criminal gangs that control the route.
Since PresidentDonald Trump renewed his vow to build an impenetrable wall to keep undocumented migrants out, traffickers - commonly known as "coyotes" - have raised their fees, trying to cash in on desperation to reach the land of the American dream before its too late.
In 2014 President Barack Obama approved a special refugee reunification program to discourage tens of thousands of Central American children from risking their lives to join undocumented parents in the US. The program was set to give these children refugee status - the Trump administration has since stopped the scheme in its tracks, raising concerns of a new wave of unaccompanied minors trying to reach the border.
Talk to Al Jazeera travels to El Salvador to see what is driving the migration wave and at what price.
More from Talk To Al Jazeera on:
YouTube - http://aje.io/ttajYT
Facebook - http://facebook.com/talktoaj
Twitter - http://twitter.com/talktoaljazeera
Website - http://www.aljazeera.com/talktojazeera/

El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala form what is known as Central America's "NorthernTriangle". The region is overrun by organised crime and gangs, resulting from violent civil wars that rocked the three countries in the 1980s.
According to a report from the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), over 137,000 people from the Northern Triangle entered the US last year, up until June alone. Figures show that hundreds of thousands of men, women and children continue to try and flee poverty and violence in an attempt to reach the United States at any price.
Contrary to claims made by the Trump administration, the number of undocumented migrants from Mexico has fallen in the last few years. However, it is the Central Americans who are increasingly attempting to cross the border, especially from El Salvador.
El Salvador has the highest murder rate in the world, and according to the 2016 El Salvador Crime and SafetyReport conducted by the US Overseas Security Advisory Council, almost one quarter of all Salvadorans were victims of crime in 2015. Salvadorans travel by land across Guatemala into Mexico - arguably the most dangerous part of the journey - where countless migrants are robbed, kidnapped, raped and/or killed by Mexican criminal gangs that control the route.
Since PresidentDonald Trump renewed his vow to build an impenetrable wall to keep undocumented migrants out, traffickers - commonly known as "coyotes" - have raised their fees, trying to cash in on desperation to reach the land of the American dream before its too late.
In 2014 President Barack Obama approved a special refugee reunification program to discourage tens of thousands of Central American children from risking their lives to join undocumented parents in the US. The program was set to give these children refugee status - the Trump administration has since stopped the scheme in its tracks, raising concerns of a new wave of unaccompanied minors trying to reach the border.
Talk to Al Jazeera travels to El Salvador to see what is driving the migration wave and at what price.
More from Talk To Al Jazeera on:
YouTube - http://aje.io/ttajYT
Facebook - http://facebook.com/talktoaj
Twitter - http://twitter.com/talktoaljazeera
Website - http://www.aljazeera.com/talktojazeera/

Detained by Militias: Libya's Migrant Trade (Part 1)

In a desperate bid to seek a better life in Europe, thousands of refugees and migrants leave the shores of Libya and cross the perilous Mediterranean Sea every ...

In a desperate bid to seek a better life in Europe, thousands of refugees and migrants leave the shores of Libya and cross the perilous Mediterranean Sea every month. Over 2,000 people have died making the journey in 2015 alone.
The routes to and journey through Libya are also dangerous, however, and since the fall of Muammar Qaddafi in 2011, the country has struggled to achieve and maintain stability. Porous desert borders, rival fighters, and weak governance have left much of Libya in complete chaos.
With militias controlling large swathes of land, their attentions have turned to the people that cross their territories. The fighters assert they are bringing order to the country as they detain the refugees, yet these people’s lives have become valuable commodities to the militias as they try to solidify their positions in the country.
VICENews secured exclusive access to a camp outside Tripoli, run by a militia that has seized hundreds of migrants. Food is scarce, dehydration and disease is rife, and control comes in the form of whips and warning shots. The militia claims to have the migrants’ interests at heart, but what emerges is a very different story.
In part one of a two-part series, VICE News examines how Libya is struggling with the Mediterranean migrant crisis, where state-run detention centers are overcrowded and violent, and how government immigration controls are outsourced to militias, where they detain migrants en masse.
Watch "Seeking Refuge in Europe: BreakingBorders (Dispatch 1)" - http://bit.ly/1Qt8Ejr
Read "Germany Enacts Border Controls After Overwhelming Influx of Migrants and Refugees" - http://bit.ly/1Qcf7hY
Subscribe to VICE News here: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-to-VICE-News
Check out VICE News for more: http://vicenews.com
Follow VICE News here:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/vicenews
Twitter: https://twitter.com/vicenews
Tumblr: http://vicenews.tumblr.com/
Instagram: http://instagram.com/vicenews
More videos from the VICE network: https://www.fb.com/vicevideos

In a desperate bid to seek a better life in Europe, thousands of refugees and migrants leave the shores of Libya and cross the perilous Mediterranean Sea every month. Over 2,000 people have died making the journey in 2015 alone.
The routes to and journey through Libya are also dangerous, however, and since the fall of Muammar Qaddafi in 2011, the country has struggled to achieve and maintain stability. Porous desert borders, rival fighters, and weak governance have left much of Libya in complete chaos.
With militias controlling large swathes of land, their attentions have turned to the people that cross their territories. The fighters assert they are bringing order to the country as they detain the refugees, yet these people’s lives have become valuable commodities to the militias as they try to solidify their positions in the country.
VICENews secured exclusive access to a camp outside Tripoli, run by a militia that has seized hundreds of migrants. Food is scarce, dehydration and disease is rife, and control comes in the form of whips and warning shots. The militia claims to have the migrants’ interests at heart, but what emerges is a very different story.
In part one of a two-part series, VICE News examines how Libya is struggling with the Mediterranean migrant crisis, where state-run detention centers are overcrowded and violent, and how government immigration controls are outsourced to militias, where they detain migrants en masse.
Watch "Seeking Refuge in Europe: BreakingBorders (Dispatch 1)" - http://bit.ly/1Qt8Ejr
Read "Germany Enacts Border Controls After Overwhelming Influx of Migrants and Refugees" - http://bit.ly/1Qcf7hY
Subscribe to VICE News here: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-to-VICE-News
Check out VICE News for more: http://vicenews.com
Follow VICE News here:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/vicenews
Twitter: https://twitter.com/vicenews
Tumblr: http://vicenews.tumblr.com/
Instagram: http://instagram.com/vicenews
More videos from the VICE network: https://www.fb.com/vicevideos

When traveling from Central America to the United States through Mexico, immigrants are forced to battle drug cartels, corrupt police officers, and human traffickers, all before they even come close to the US border.
People tend to assume that the immigrants crossing the US--Mexico border are all Mexican. The reality is that a large percentage of them come from Central America, and their journey north is grueling. To get to the US, they first have to pass through Mexico, an ordeal that often ends up being even more difficult than getting into the United States. Most migrants cross into Mexico on rafts, via the Suchiate River. After that, they need to protect themselves from corrupt Mexican police, drug cartels like the infamous Zetas, and even fellow migrants. They often travel by foot and by pubic transit, but many of them ride on top of "the Beast," the freight trains that travel from the south to the north of Mexico.
While the majority of the migrants are young men, a small percentage of them are women who endure hardships like the possibility of being raped by basically anyone they come across. Some of them are forced to stay in the border state of Chiapas and work as prostitutes because they are too weak to keep going, need to save some money to continue their journey, or, if they decide to stay , so they can travel back and forth between Mexico and their home countries to visit their kids[NJ1] .
In this episode of Fringes, we followed Yoana, a young girl from Guatemala who has been living in the small town of Huixtla, Chiapas, working as a prostitute to make money to help her two sons. We tagged along with a special unit from the state government that is in charge of protecting migrants as they travel through Chiapas. We then hopped on board the Beast with more than 400 other migrants traveling from Arriaga to Ixtepec, Oaxaca, to try to understand the hardships they go through and why they leave their homes in the first place.
Check out the Best ofVICE here: http://bit.ly/VICE-Best-Of
Subscribe to VICE here! http://bit.ly/Subscribe-to-VICE
Check out our full video catalog: http://bit.ly/VICE-Videos
Videos, daily editorial and more: http://vice.com
Like VICE on Facebook: http://fb.com/vice
Follow VICE on Twitter: http://twitter.com/vice
Read our tumblr: http://vicemag.tumblr.com

When traveling from Central America to the United States through Mexico, immigrants are forced to battle drug cartels, corrupt police officers, and human traffickers, all before they even come close to the US border.
People tend to assume that the immigrants crossing the US--Mexico border are all Mexican. The reality is that a large percentage of them come from Central America, and their journey north is grueling. To get to the US, they first have to pass through Mexico, an ordeal that often ends up being even more difficult than getting into the United States. Most migrants cross into Mexico on rafts, via the Suchiate River. After that, they need to protect themselves from corrupt Mexican police, drug cartels like the infamous Zetas, and even fellow migrants. They often travel by foot and by pubic transit, but many of them ride on top of "the Beast," the freight trains that travel from the south to the north of Mexico.
While the majority of the migrants are young men, a small percentage of them are women who endure hardships like the possibility of being raped by basically anyone they come across. Some of them are forced to stay in the border state of Chiapas and work as prostitutes because they are too weak to keep going, need to save some money to continue their journey, or, if they decide to stay , so they can travel back and forth between Mexico and their home countries to visit their kids[NJ1] .
In this episode of Fringes, we followed Yoana, a young girl from Guatemala who has been living in the small town of Huixtla, Chiapas, working as a prostitute to make money to help her two sons. We tagged along with a special unit from the state government that is in charge of protecting migrants as they travel through Chiapas. We then hopped on board the Beast with more than 400 other migrants traveling from Arriaga to Ixtepec, Oaxaca, to try to understand the hardships they go through and why they leave their homes in the first place.
Check out the Best ofVICE here: http://bit.ly/VICE-Best-Of
Subscribe to VICE here! http://bit.ly/Subscribe-to-VICE
Check out our full video catalog: http://bit.ly/VICE-Videos
Videos, daily editorial and more: http://vice.com
Like VICE on Facebook: http://fb.com/vice
Follow VICE on Twitter: http://twitter.com/vice
Read our tumblr: http://vicemag.tumblr.com

published:29 Mar 2013

views:1414629

back

Let Them Come: We Have Nothing to Fear From High Levels of Immigration

http://www.intelligencesquared.com/events/we-have-nothing-to-fear-from-high-levels-of-immigration/
When the EU's transitional immigration rules expire on 1st January 2014, numerous Bulgarians and Romanians will be heading for Britain. And we should put out the welcome mat. Yes, it's true that there has been a huge fuss about this in the press, but then xenophobia sells newspapers. The truth is that like the other waves of immigrants to Britain, those coming here will overwhelmingly be people with initiative, people who want to better their prospects. And our economy needs them. Immigrants don't steal jobs from the existing British workforce: all the evidence suggests they make possible the creation of new jobs. Mass immigration has always enriched economies and cultures and never more so than in the present globalised world. Yes, it's easy to stoke the fires of xenophobia and get the British public all ugly on the issue, but it's wrong: the pundits and the politicians should be allaying public fears of immigration not pandering to them.
That's the liberal "metropolitan" line, but as its critics see it, it overlooks a crucial aspect of the human personality: we are not a random jumble of individuals who just happen to inhabit the same small island. We are a nation, they say: and our sense of identity with nation is, or should be, central to who we are. And while no civilised nation, least of all Britain, should be opposed to immigration, we should be opposed to the unprecedented scale on which it has been occurring. It's the numbers, stupid. Immigrants have undoubtedly enriched our culture, but for there to be such a thing as British culture, for there to be a sense of nationhood and national pride, it is essential that the newcomers be absorbed into British life rather than form distinct cultural colonies. There's nothing racist about this. Nothing racist in feeling apprehensive about the next influx from Eastern Europe, for example. It's not just a matter of what that might mean for our overstrained services and for British citizens competing for low-paid jobs: it's the damage done to our sense of belonging to the same community. This isn't some kind of extremist position: as polls have shown, seven out of ten Britons think there are too many foreigners in the country.

http://www.intelligencesquared.com/events/we-have-nothing-to-fear-from-high-levels-of-immigration/
When the EU's transitional immigration rules expire on 1st January 2014, numerous Bulgarians and Romanians will be heading for Britain. And we should put out the welcome mat. Yes, it's true that there has been a huge fuss about this in the press, but then xenophobia sells newspapers. The truth is that like the other waves of immigrants to Britain, those coming here will overwhelmingly be people with initiative, people who want to better their prospects. And our economy needs them. Immigrants don't steal jobs from the existing British workforce: all the evidence suggests they make possible the creation of new jobs. Mass immigration has always enriched economies and cultures and never more so than in the present globalised world. Yes, it's easy to stoke the fires of xenophobia and get the British public all ugly on the issue, but it's wrong: the pundits and the politicians should be allaying public fears of immigration not pandering to them.
That's the liberal "metropolitan" line, but as its critics see it, it overlooks a crucial aspect of the human personality: we are not a random jumble of individuals who just happen to inhabit the same small island. We are a nation, they say: and our sense of identity with nation is, or should be, central to who we are. And while no civilised nation, least of all Britain, should be opposed to immigration, we should be opposed to the unprecedented scale on which it has been occurring. It's the numbers, stupid. Immigrants have undoubtedly enriched our culture, but for there to be such a thing as British culture, for there to be a sense of nationhood and national pride, it is essential that the newcomers be absorbed into British life rather than form distinct cultural colonies. There's nothing racist about this. Nothing racist in feeling apprehensive about the next influx from Eastern Europe, for example. It's not just a matter of what that might mean for our overstrained services and for British citizens competing for low-paid jobs: it's the damage done to our sense of belonging to the same community. This isn't some kind of extremist position: as polls have shown, seven out of ten Britons think there are too many foreigners in the country.

The Truth About Immigration in the UK 2014 (BBC, HD 720p)

Did Britain need immigrants to keep economy growing?
BBC political editor Nick Robinson examines the public's anxieties about immigration and reveals the fact...

Did Britain need immigrants to keep economy growing?
BBC political editor Nick Robinson examines the public's anxieties about immigration and reveals the facts of an issue that has transformed British politics. With Britain braced for a new wave of migrants from eastern Europe, a subject once regarded as toxic is now at the forefront of political discussion. The programme dissects the decisions which led to the biggest surge of immigration in modern history and asks whether politicians can control immigration as much as they claim, looking at the potential consequences of their pledges.

Did Britain need immigrants to keep economy growing?
BBC political editor Nick Robinson examines the public's anxieties about immigration and reveals the facts of an issue that has transformed British politics. With Britain braced for a new wave of migrants from eastern Europe, a subject once regarded as toxic is now at the forefront of political discussion. The programme dissects the decisions which led to the biggest surge of immigration in modern history and asks whether politicians can control immigration as much as they claim, looking at the potential consequences of their pledges.

published:09 Jan 2014

views:1566358

back

The Spanish Dishonor Their Ancestors And Allow Migrants To Undo 300 Years Of Reconquista

Migration in Europe What Trends to Watch in 2018 1 31 2018 Video

Is 2018 the year that the European Union takes leadership on migration on the international stage, or where it focuses inwards on healing internal divisions and...

Is 2018 the year that the European Union takes leadership on migration on the international stage, or where it focuses inwards on healing internal divisions and delivering on overdue migration and asylum system reforms? With two high-profile compacts on migration and refugees being negotiated by the United Nations, Europe can potentially seize the momentum to shape a new international migration framework—and fill the vacuum left by the United States’ withdrawal. But with a series of critical elections across the continent, and key states struggling to form coalition governments, Europe’s ability to set the agenda may be limited. Europe may need to first get its own house in order, passing reforms to the Dublin Regulations, hammering down citizens’ rights post-Brexit, and designing strategic legal pathways, to name a few. This webinar looks ahead at the major external and internal events affecting migration on the continent over the next year.
Speakers included:
- ElizabethCollett, Director, Migration Policy Institute Europe
- Milan Nič, Senior Fellow, Robert BoschCenter for Central and Eastern Europe, Russia, and Central Asia, German Council on Foreign Relations
- Pierre Vimont, Senior Fellow, Carnegie Europe
And the conversation was moderated by: Natalia Banulescu-Bogdan, Associate Director, InternationalProgram, Migration Policy Institute
www.migrationpolicy.org

Is 2018 the year that the European Union takes leadership on migration on the international stage, or where it focuses inwards on healing internal divisions and delivering on overdue migration and asylum system reforms? With two high-profile compacts on migration and refugees being negotiated by the United Nations, Europe can potentially seize the momentum to shape a new international migration framework—and fill the vacuum left by the United States’ withdrawal. But with a series of critical elections across the continent, and key states struggling to form coalition governments, Europe’s ability to set the agenda may be limited. Europe may need to first get its own house in order, passing reforms to the Dublin Regulations, hammering down citizens’ rights post-Brexit, and designing strategic legal pathways, to name a few. This webinar looks ahead at the major external and internal events affecting migration on the continent over the next year.
Speakers included:
- ElizabethCollett, Director, Migration Policy Institute Europe
- Milan Nič, Senior Fellow, Robert BoschCenter for Central and Eastern Europe, Russia, and Central Asia, German Council on Foreign Relations
- Pierre Vimont, Senior Fellow, Carnegie Europe
And the conversation was moderated by: Natalia Banulescu-Bogdan, Associate Director, InternationalProgram, Migration Policy Institute
www.migrationpolicy.org

published:05 Feb 2018

views:11

back

Italy - Debate on Whether current migration destroy Europe as we know it

EU Immigration's Shocking New Trend

The EU's New Refugees: Waves of immigration have always been a source of political tension in Europe. Now, the EU is facing up to an unusual new migration worr...

The EU's New Refugees: Waves of immigration have always been a source of political tension in Europe. Now, the EU is facing up to an unusual new migration worry: floods of migrants fleeing from the continent's faltering economies.
For downloads and more visit: http://www.journeyman.tv/?lid=65135&bid=2
The boom years are over, and now faltering European nations are all experiencing this new trend in emigration. In thePortuguese capital Lisbon, queues form outside African embassies as EU citizens try to acquire working visas. According to ex-pat JulianaFleming, "I know many people who are trying to sell their homes in Portugal, to settle in Mozambique". 300,000 have left Spain since the banking crisis in 2008. ChefCarlos Garcia couldn't find work in Madrid, so instead went to look in Argentina. "You walk in the centre of Buenos Aires, and you feel like you are in Spain. I strongly recommend it to anyone who sees no future prospects". And though many of those escaping do wish to return if the situation improves back home, most aren't hopeful about how soon that may be. "First it was 2013, now they say 2014. We'll see."
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JourneymanPictures is your independent source for the world's most powerful films, exploring the burning issues of today. We represent stories from the world's top producers, with brand new content coming in all the time. On our channel you'll find outstanding and controversial journalism covering any global subject you can imagine wanting to know about.

The EU's New Refugees: Waves of immigration have always been a source of political tension in Europe. Now, the EU is facing up to an unusual new migration worry: floods of migrants fleeing from the continent's faltering economies.
For downloads and more visit: http://www.journeyman.tv/?lid=65135&bid=2
The boom years are over, and now faltering European nations are all experiencing this new trend in emigration. In thePortuguese capital Lisbon, queues form outside African embassies as EU citizens try to acquire working visas. According to ex-pat JulianaFleming, "I know many people who are trying to sell their homes in Portugal, to settle in Mozambique". 300,000 have left Spain since the banking crisis in 2008. ChefCarlos Garcia couldn't find work in Madrid, so instead went to look in Argentina. "You walk in the centre of Buenos Aires, and you feel like you are in Spain. I strongly recommend it to anyone who sees no future prospects". And though many of those escaping do wish to return if the situation improves back home, most aren't hopeful about how soon that may be. "First it was 2013, now they say 2014. We'll see."
ORF - Ref. 5722
JourneymanPictures is your independent source for the world's most powerful films, exploring the burning issues of today. We represent stories from the world's top producers, with brand new content coming in all the time. On our channel you'll find outstanding and controversial journalism covering any global subject you can imagine wanting to know about.

MP3Download: http://www.fdrpodcasts.com/#/3065/what-pisses-me-off-about-the-european-migrant-crisis
The European migrant crisis arose through the rising number of migrant arrivals seeking asylum – a combination of economic migrants and refugees – to the European Union (EU) across the Mediterranean Sea and the Balkans fromAfrica, the Middle East, and South Asia.
German ChancellorAngela Merkel said that Germany expected over 800,000 asylum seekers to come this year - over four times more than in 2014. European Union member states agreed in July to take in more than 32,000 migrants to “ease the burden” on Italy and Greece, where the largest numbers have arrived. Another eight-thousand should be allocated by the end of the year, according to the European Union's commissioner for migration.
Stefan Molyneux is pissed off – and provides an important look at the EuropeanMigrantCrisis.
GermanVersion:Was mich an der Europäischen Flüchtlingskrise ärgert: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=43UX0XOTUHY
Freedomain Radio is 100% funded by viewers like you. Please support the show by signing up for a monthly subscription or making a one time donation at: http://www.fdrurl.com/donate
Get more from Stefan Molyneux and Freedomain Radio including books, podcasts and other info at: http://www.freedomainradio.com
Sources
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/11721008/Europe-migrant-crisis-Where-are-the-asylum-seekers-coming-from-and-where-are-they-going.html
http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained/index.php/Asylum_quarterly_report
http://www.theguardian.com/world/datablog/2015/aug/27/germany-gets-27-syrian-asylum-applications-for-every-one-to-the-uk
http://www.economist.com/news/europe/21661941-wanting-burden-shared-germany-eu-country-which-takes-most-asylum-seekers-straining
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/germany/11675380/Germany-industry-chiefs-call-for-jobs-for-asylum-seekers.html
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/01/01/us-germany-immigration-idUSKBN0KA1KZ20150101

MP3Download: http://www.fdrpodcasts.com/#/3065/what-pisses-me-off-about-the-european-migrant-crisis
The European migrant crisis arose through the rising number of migrant arrivals seeking asylum – a combination of economic migrants and refugees – to the European Union (EU) across the Mediterranean Sea and the Balkans fromAfrica, the Middle East, and South Asia.
German ChancellorAngela Merkel said that Germany expected over 800,000 asylum seekers to come this year - over four times more than in 2014. European Union member states agreed in July to take in more than 32,000 migrants to “ease the burden” on Italy and Greece, where the largest numbers have arrived. Another eight-thousand should be allocated by the end of the year, according to the European Union's commissioner for migration.
Stefan Molyneux is pissed off – and provides an important look at the EuropeanMigrantCrisis.
GermanVersion:Was mich an der Europäischen Flüchtlingskrise ärgert: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=43UX0XOTUHY
Freedomain Radio is 100% funded by viewers like you. Please support the show by signing up for a monthly subscription or making a one time donation at: http://www.fdrurl.com/donate
Get more from Stefan Molyneux and Freedomain Radio including books, podcasts and other info at: http://www.freedomainradio.com
Sources
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/11721008/Europe-migrant-crisis-Where-are-the-asylum-seekers-coming-from-and-where-are-they-going.html
http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained/index.php/Asylum_quarterly_report
http://www.theguardian.com/world/datablog/2015/aug/27/germany-gets-27-syrian-asylum-applications-for-every-one-to-the-uk
http://www.economist.com/news/europe/21661941-wanting-burden-shared-germany-eu-country-which-takes-most-asylum-seekers-straining
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/germany/11675380/Germany-industry-chiefs-call-for-jobs-for-asylum-seekers.html
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/01/01/us-germany-immigration-idUSKBN0KA1KZ20150101

MANUELA BOJADŽIJEV: „Is (neo-)racism a form of violence of the past?“

MANUELA BOJADŽIJEV: „Is (neo-)racism a form of violence of the past?“ Conjunctures of racism theory
In my talk I will address the question of violence conceptua...

MANUELA BOJADŽIJEV: „Is (neo-)racism a form of violence of the past?“ Conjunctures of racism theory
In my talk I will address the question of violence conceptually by focussing on racism as a form of violence. I will ask how we can understand racism. The question of time in relation to racism as a form of violence is relevant. While some may argue that racism is an outdated form of violence which, albeit its recurrent return, receives no substantial renewal and is therefore to be understood as „the surviving old in the new“; others have argued that racism has proliferated to a degree that is has by now become almost ubiquitous. In order to anchor the debate I will offer a genealogy of critical racism theory in Germany, focussing on its conceptual values and guiding problematics for the field of analysis, its resonance within a wider international debate, and the questions that it raises that are open for debate today. I therefore propose for the discussion less a particular regional focus of the theme but rather the questions in how far this panorama of historical and conceptual contributions can help to conceptualise the violence of racism for today.
Manuela Bojadžijev is professor at the Institute for Sociology and Cultural Organisation, Leuphana UniversityLüneburg, and is a Member of the Berlin Institute for Integration and MigrationResearch (BIM) at Humboldt University, Berlin. She specializes on migration and racism in Europe, and on cultural theory. Her research focuses currently on issues of the changing conjunctures of racism in Europe as well as on mobile labor and logistics in a digitized economy. Manuela Bojadzijev has paid particular attention to how the processes of racialization transform in globalizing context, including for instance citizenship, post-colonialism and -socialism, media technology, the state, (trans-)nationalism, and popular culture. She is recently engaged in a project on the Chinese new silk road in Duisburg, together with Brett Neilson and Ned Rossiter of Western Sydney University. She is also part of a research and art project on the “Archive of Escape” at the House of World Cultures in Berlin, together with Carolin Emcke, Jopseph Vogel, Stephanie Schüler-Spingorum, and Ethel Matal de Mazza, and others.
From 2013 to 2016 Manuela Bojadžijev has been organizing a series of international summer schools at Humboldt-University, Berlin (2013: ’Teaching the Crisis’; 2014: ‘Expanding the Margins’; 2015-16 ‘Investigating Logistics’). A conference on the 30th anniversary of the publication of Race, Class, Nation with Etienne Balibar and Immanuel Wallerstein is under way for 2018.
Her major publications include a monograph on the history of migration in relation to migrants’ practices of resistance and racism theory (Die windige Internationale, Westfälisches Dampfboot 2008) and co-edited volumes (amongst others) on the transformation of the European migration regime in South East Europe (Turbulente Ränder. Neue Perspektiven auf Migration an den Grenzen Europas, 2008); on critical accounts of Europeanization (Europa dezentrieren. Beiträge zu einer reflexiven Anthropologie globaler Verflechtungen, Forthcoming); on labour, migration and logistics (Logistische Grenzlandschaften, 2017); and a handbook of racism theory in Germany (forthcoming). Her most recent articles and book chapters deal with the development of racism theories in Germany; the discourse of the ‘refugees crisis’ after 2015; logistics as a perspective for migration studies (co-authored with Sandro Mezzadra); virtual migration, labour and racism (co-authored with Moritz Altenried).

MANUELA BOJADŽIJEV: „Is (neo-)racism a form of violence of the past?“ Conjunctures of racism theory
In my talk I will address the question of violence conceptually by focussing on racism as a form of violence. I will ask how we can understand racism. The question of time in relation to racism as a form of violence is relevant. While some may argue that racism is an outdated form of violence which, albeit its recurrent return, receives no substantial renewal and is therefore to be understood as „the surviving old in the new“; others have argued that racism has proliferated to a degree that is has by now become almost ubiquitous. In order to anchor the debate I will offer a genealogy of critical racism theory in Germany, focussing on its conceptual values and guiding problematics for the field of analysis, its resonance within a wider international debate, and the questions that it raises that are open for debate today. I therefore propose for the discussion less a particular regional focus of the theme but rather the questions in how far this panorama of historical and conceptual contributions can help to conceptualise the violence of racism for today.
Manuela Bojadžijev is professor at the Institute for Sociology and Cultural Organisation, Leuphana UniversityLüneburg, and is a Member of the Berlin Institute for Integration and MigrationResearch (BIM) at Humboldt University, Berlin. She specializes on migration and racism in Europe, and on cultural theory. Her research focuses currently on issues of the changing conjunctures of racism in Europe as well as on mobile labor and logistics in a digitized economy. Manuela Bojadzijev has paid particular attention to how the processes of racialization transform in globalizing context, including for instance citizenship, post-colonialism and -socialism, media technology, the state, (trans-)nationalism, and popular culture. She is recently engaged in a project on the Chinese new silk road in Duisburg, together with Brett Neilson and Ned Rossiter of Western Sydney University. She is also part of a research and art project on the “Archive of Escape” at the House of World Cultures in Berlin, together with Carolin Emcke, Jopseph Vogel, Stephanie Schüler-Spingorum, and Ethel Matal de Mazza, and others.
From 2013 to 2016 Manuela Bojadžijev has been organizing a series of international summer schools at Humboldt-University, Berlin (2013: ’Teaching the Crisis’; 2014: ‘Expanding the Margins’; 2015-16 ‘Investigating Logistics’). A conference on the 30th anniversary of the publication of Race, Class, Nation with Etienne Balibar and Immanuel Wallerstein is under way for 2018.
Her major publications include a monograph on the history of migration in relation to migrants’ practices of resistance and racism theory (Die windige Internationale, Westfälisches Dampfboot 2008) and co-edited volumes (amongst others) on the transformation of the European migration regime in South East Europe (Turbulente Ränder. Neue Perspektiven auf Migration an den Grenzen Europas, 2008); on critical accounts of Europeanization (Europa dezentrieren. Beiträge zu einer reflexiven Anthropologie globaler Verflechtungen, Forthcoming); on labour, migration and logistics (Logistische Grenzlandschaften, 2017); and a handbook of racism theory in Germany (forthcoming). Her most recent articles and book chapters deal with the development of racism theories in Germany; the discourse of the ‘refugees crisis’ after 2015; logistics as a perspective for migration studies (co-authored with Sandro Mezzadra); virtual migration, labour and racism (co-authored with Moritz Altenried).

SOENDERBORG, DENMARK — Danish nightclub owner Tom HoldenJensen says he’d rather go to prison than overturn a “language test” he instituted.
Jensen is demanding that those who wish to enter his establishment must speak either Danish, German or English. Jensen, who runs the Buddy Holly club in Soenderborg, says he’s received too many complaints from women who said they felt threatened or intimidated by groups of sexually aggressive young migrant men who do not speak any of the commonly spoken European languages.
Jensen strenuously denies he is racist in any way and says the language test is designed to make sure his staff is able to communicate with customers, which sometimes includes informing them that their behavior is unacceptable.
“The challenge is that we can’t communicate with refugees, they don’t understand what I’m saying at all,” Mr. Jensen told the MailOnline. “We’ve had these challenges with all men, whatever their nationality, not only the Syrian refugees, and we’ve always had these challenges,” he continued while also noting that Danish clubs have had language rules in place in some form since 1997.
But Denmark has strict anti-discrimination laws which state that anyone in a commercial or public utility who denies service to anyone due to their race, color, national or ethnic origin, religion or sexual orientation, can be fined or even imprisoned for up to six months.
Jensen says bring it on. He’s not planning on changing his policy and said he’d rather go to prison. It’s unclear if Jensen is actually breaking the law by instituting a language test which is, according to the club, designed to enhance safety measures. A police spokesperson quoted in the MailOnline said he didn’t know if ‘language’ falls under the ‘nationality’ clause in the law and legal experts may have to rule on this issue.
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Migrants and Refugees: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)

Millions of migrants seeking asylum in Europe face hostility, racism, and red tape. John Oliver does one admittedly tiny thing for one of them.
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Hundreds of migrants broke through Hungarian police lines near the Serbian border on Monday and marched north on the main highway to Budapest as authorities once again were overwhelmed by the human tide passing through Hungary.
Police repeatedly tried to form lines blocking roadways around a migrant-holding centre near the border village of Roszke.
But the asylum seekers vastly outnumbered police and were able to go around authorities, racing through farm fields to reach the M5 motorway which runs from Serbia into Hungary.
The birthday of the Hindu deityKrishna was celebrated in Mumbai on Sunday with the annual Dahi Handi festival.
The tradition involves participants, known as govindas, forming a human pyramid to reach a pot filled with curd hanging above the ground.
Hindu legend says that Lord Krishna used to like butter and curd, and formed pyramids with his friends in order to steal the pots.
Although an annual tradition, local authorities have limited the height at which the pots can be tied, as injuries have been known to take place.
Find out more about AP Archive: http://tinyurl.com/neh3pb4
Story number for this item is: 4003108

4:00

Changing the debate: video animation on the impact of immigration on the UK

Opinion polls have shown for some time that the public sees immigration as one of the most...

Changing the debate: video animation on the impact of immigration on the UK

Opinion polls have shown for some time that the public sees immigration as one of the most important issues facing Britain (Ipsos Mori, 2015). At the same time, public understanding of evidence on the economic impacts of immigration is poor and strongly influenced by the media. This in turn affects the quality and content of public debate and the policy formulation process. This video presents evidence of the economic benefits of immigration to the UK and to London, but acknowledges that there has been some impact on pay, and that there are ‘winners and losers’. It is targeted at a wide audience who lack accurate information about migration impacts from which to form their opinions. It is intended to stimulate thinking and debate.
For details of the sources used in this video, please visit the NIESR website here: http://tinyurl.com/j5e47nd

2:04

Germany: PEGIDA make human-wall to 'stop migrants' at Czech border

Hundreds of PEGIDA (Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamisation of the West) supporters, ...

Germany: PEGIDA make human-wall to 'stop migrants' at Czech border

Hundreds of PEGIDA (Patriotic EuropeansAgainst the Islamisation of the West) supporters, as well as right-wing Czech activists, gathered at Schirnding municipality at the German-Czech border to form a 'human wall' in protest against a record influx of refugees and migrants coming to both EU countries.
Video ID: 20151108-076
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2:29

Group of migrants depart for Finland, Sweden

(21 Oct 2015) A group of 68 refugees flew from Italy bound for Sweden and Finland on Wedne...

Group of migrants depart for Finland, Sweden

(21 Oct 2015) A group of 68 refugees flew from Italy bound for Sweden and Finland on Wednesday as part of the first phase of the European Union's relocation plan.
The 49 Eritreans and 19 Syrians took off from Rome's Ciampino Airport and will land at Finland's Kemi-Tornio airport, before some are then moved on to Sweden.
One Syrian refugee said he was "very happy" to be part of the first to make the trip.
According to the International Organisation for Migrants Finland has agreed to take 3,200 over two years form Italy and Greece.
In this first test phase they are taking 400.
The Italian government has said it hopes the relocation process will become more frequent with around 100 refugees departing each day.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/5b470909ca684dbc0d072388159219ee
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

12:58

Migrants trying to enter the U.S. are trapped in Tijuana

Tens of thousands of migrants from around the world are stranded in Tijuana, Mexico as the...

Migrants trying to enter the U.S. are trapped in Tijuana

Tens of thousands of migrants from around the world are stranded in Tijuana, Mexico as they try to make it across the border to the United States.
The United States has long been known for welcoming immigrants from around the globe - from refugees fleeing war to opportunity seekers looking for a better quality of life.
These days many migrants attempting to enter the U.S. say they feel like they're being pushed away rather than embraced.
One city bordering the United States that has seen the arrival of an estimated 30-thousand migrants in the last two years is Tijuana. There are more than 30 shelters that house just the migrants from Haiti alone. In fact, one local pastor and his wife have donated land to them with the hope it will become Mexico’s first “Little Haiti.”
Check out Mike Kirsch’s package for “Americas Now” to find out more about these migrants and their life in limbo.
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25:31

Talk to Al Jazeera - Hispanic Migrants: Back to Square One

El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala form what is known as Central America's "Northern Tria...

Talk to Al Jazeera - Hispanic Migrants: Back to Square One

El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala form what is known as Central America's "NorthernTriangle". The region is overrun by organised crime and gangs, resulting from violent civil wars that rocked the three countries in the 1980s.
According to a report from the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), over 137,000 people from the Northern Triangle entered the US last year, up until June alone. Figures show that hundreds of thousands of men, women and children continue to try and flee poverty and violence in an attempt to reach the United States at any price.
Contrary to claims made by the Trump administration, the number of undocumented migrants from Mexico has fallen in the last few years. However, it is the Central Americans who are increasingly attempting to cross the border, especially from El Salvador.
El Salvador has the highest murder rate in the world, and according to the 2016 El Salvador Crime and SafetyReport conducted by the US Overseas Security Advisory Council, almost one quarter of all Salvadorans were victims of crime in 2015. Salvadorans travel by land across Guatemala into Mexico - arguably the most dangerous part of the journey - where countless migrants are robbed, kidnapped, raped and/or killed by Mexican criminal gangs that control the route.
Since PresidentDonald Trump renewed his vow to build an impenetrable wall to keep undocumented migrants out, traffickers - commonly known as "coyotes" - have raised their fees, trying to cash in on desperation to reach the land of the American dream before its too late.
In 2014 President Barack Obama approved a special refugee reunification program to discourage tens of thousands of Central American children from risking their lives to join undocumented parents in the US. The program was set to give these children refugee status - the Trump administration has since stopped the scheme in its tracks, raising concerns of a new wave of unaccompanied minors trying to reach the border.
Talk to Al Jazeera travels to El Salvador to see what is driving the migration wave and at what price.
More from Talk To Al Jazeera on:
YouTube - http://aje.io/ttajYT
Facebook - http://facebook.com/talktoaj
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Website - http://www.aljazeera.com/talktojazeera/

6:51

Are Indian migrants treated well in New Zealand??

For more info on NZ education and migration, fill this form - https://docs.google.com/a/aj...

Are Indian migrants treated well in New Zealand??

For more info on NZ education and migration, fill this form - https://docs.google.com/a/ajv.kiwi/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSevIZ_ActZ52AihpbD54qRdsTenSIUS3_kWW_73afJ_ze-UWA/viewform
Or join - https://www.facebook.com/groups/NZOptions/

11:58

UK Immigration News 19th August 2017

Immigration Laws of the UK is frequently changing, which is very important for migrant com...

Libya’s Migrant Trade: Europe or Die (Full Length)

In a desperate bid to seek a better life in Europe, thousands of refugees and migrants leave the shores ofLibya and cross the perilous Mediterranean Sea every month. Over 2,000 people have died making the journey in 2015 alone.
The routes to and journey through Libya are also dangerous, however, and since the fall of Muammar Qaddafi in 2011, the country has struggled to achieve and maintain stability. Porous desert borders, rival fighters, and weak governance have left much of Libya in complete chaos.
With militias controlling large swathes of land, their attentions have turned to the people that cross their territories. The fighters assert they are bringing order to the country as they detain the refugees, yet these people’s lives have become valuable commodities to the militias as they try to solidify their positions in the country.
VICENews secured exclusive access to a camp outside Tripoli, run by a militia that has seized hundreds of migrants. Food is scarce, dehydration and disease is rife, and control comes in the form of whips and warning shots. The militia claims to have the migrants’ interests at heart, but what emerges is a very different story.
VICE News secured exclusive access to a camp outside Tripoli, run by a militia that has seized hundreds of migrants.
Watch "Stopover in Serbia: BreakingBorders (Dispatch 4)" - http://bit.ly/1JbWohd
Read "VideoShowsHungarian PoliceFiringTear Gas and WaterCannon at Migrants" - http://bit.ly/1KgXwlz
Subscribe to VICE News here: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-to-VICE-News
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1:21:10

Migration to Australia (Skilled Migration)

*** IMPORTANT *** Please don't raise questions here. For further help please complete the ...

Migration to Australia (Skilled Migration)

*** IMPORTANT *** Please don't raise questions here. For further help please complete the free assessment form at www.anzmigrate.com and for questions please email info@anzmigrate.com
A detailed introduction to the skilled migration program discussing aspects of the system, key requirements and the steps involved including maintaining the PR after it has been issued. An important introduction for anyone considering skilled migration to Australia.

25:31

Talk to Al Jazeera - Hispanic Migrants: Back to Square One

El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala form what is known as Central America's "Northern Tria...

Talk to Al Jazeera - Hispanic Migrants: Back to Square One

El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala form what is known as Central America's "NorthernTriangle". The region is overrun by organised crime and gangs, resulting from violent civil wars that rocked the three countries in the 1980s.
According to a report from the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), over 137,000 people from the Northern Triangle entered the US last year, up until June alone. Figures show that hundreds of thousands of men, women and children continue to try and flee poverty and violence in an attempt to reach the United States at any price.
Contrary to claims made by the Trump administration, the number of undocumented migrants from Mexico has fallen in the last few years. However, it is the Central Americans who are increasingly attempting to cross the border, especially from El Salvador.
El Salvador has the highest murder rate in the world, and according to the 2016 El Salvador Crime and SafetyReport conducted by the US Overseas Security Advisory Council, almost one quarter of all Salvadorans were victims of crime in 2015. Salvadorans travel by land across Guatemala into Mexico - arguably the most dangerous part of the journey - where countless migrants are robbed, kidnapped, raped and/or killed by Mexican criminal gangs that control the route.
Since PresidentDonald Trump renewed his vow to build an impenetrable wall to keep undocumented migrants out, traffickers - commonly known as "coyotes" - have raised their fees, trying to cash in on desperation to reach the land of the American dream before its too late.
In 2014 President Barack Obama approved a special refugee reunification program to discourage tens of thousands of Central American children from risking their lives to join undocumented parents in the US. The program was set to give these children refugee status - the Trump administration has since stopped the scheme in its tracks, raising concerns of a new wave of unaccompanied minors trying to reach the border.
Talk to Al Jazeera travels to El Salvador to see what is driving the migration wave and at what price.
More from Talk To Al Jazeera on:
YouTube - http://aje.io/ttajYT
Facebook - http://facebook.com/talktoaj
Twitter - http://twitter.com/talktoaljazeera
Website - http://www.aljazeera.com/talktojazeera/

20:24

Detained by Militias: Libya's Migrant Trade (Part 1)

In a desperate bid to seek a better life in Europe, thousands of refugees and migrants lea...

Detained by Militias: Libya's Migrant Trade (Part 1)

In a desperate bid to seek a better life in Europe, thousands of refugees and migrants leave the shores of Libya and cross the perilous Mediterranean Sea every month. Over 2,000 people have died making the journey in 2015 alone.
The routes to and journey through Libya are also dangerous, however, and since the fall of Muammar Qaddafi in 2011, the country has struggled to achieve and maintain stability. Porous desert borders, rival fighters, and weak governance have left much of Libya in complete chaos.
With militias controlling large swathes of land, their attentions have turned to the people that cross their territories. The fighters assert they are bringing order to the country as they detain the refugees, yet these people’s lives have become valuable commodities to the militias as they try to solidify their positions in the country.
VICENews secured exclusive access to a camp outside Tripoli, run by a militia that has seized hundreds of migrants. Food is scarce, dehydration and disease is rife, and control comes in the form of whips and warning shots. The militia claims to have the migrants’ interests at heart, but what emerges is a very different story.
In part one of a two-part series, VICE News examines how Libya is struggling with the Mediterranean migrant crisis, where state-run detention centers are overcrowded and violent, and how government immigration controls are outsourced to militias, where they detain migrants en masse.
Watch "Seeking Refuge in Europe: BreakingBorders (Dispatch 1)" - http://bit.ly/1Qt8Ejr
Read "Germany Enacts Border Controls After Overwhelming Influx of Migrants and Refugees" - http://bit.ly/1Qcf7hY
Subscribe to VICE News here: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-to-VICE-News
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23:11

Crossing Mexico's Other Border

When traveling from Central America to the United States through Mexico, immigrants are fo...

Crossing Mexico's Other Border

When traveling from Central America to the United States through Mexico, immigrants are forced to battle drug cartels, corrupt police officers, and human traffickers, all before they even come close to the US border.
People tend to assume that the immigrants crossing the US--Mexico border are all Mexican. The reality is that a large percentage of them come from Central America, and their journey north is grueling. To get to the US, they first have to pass through Mexico, an ordeal that often ends up being even more difficult than getting into the United States. Most migrants cross into Mexico on rafts, via the Suchiate River. After that, they need to protect themselves from corrupt Mexican police, drug cartels like the infamous Zetas, and even fellow migrants. They often travel by foot and by pubic transit, but many of them ride on top of "the Beast," the freight trains that travel from the south to the north of Mexico.
While the majority of the migrants are young men, a small percentage of them are women who endure hardships like the possibility of being raped by basically anyone they come across. Some of them are forced to stay in the border state of Chiapas and work as prostitutes because they are too weak to keep going, need to save some money to continue their journey, or, if they decide to stay , so they can travel back and forth between Mexico and their home countries to visit their kids[NJ1] .
In this episode of Fringes, we followed Yoana, a young girl from Guatemala who has been living in the small town of Huixtla, Chiapas, working as a prostitute to make money to help her two sons. We tagged along with a special unit from the state government that is in charge of protecting migrants as they travel through Chiapas. We then hopped on board the Beast with more than 400 other migrants traveling from Arriaga to Ixtepec, Oaxaca, to try to understand the hardships they go through and why they leave their homes in the first place.
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1:48:24

Let Them Come: We Have Nothing to Fear From High Levels of Immigration

Let Them Come: We Have Nothing to Fear From High Levels of Immigration

http://www.intelligencesquared.com/events/we-have-nothing-to-fear-from-high-levels-of-immigration/
When the EU's transitional immigration rules expire on 1st January 2014, numerous Bulgarians and Romanians will be heading for Britain. And we should put out the welcome mat. Yes, it's true that there has been a huge fuss about this in the press, but then xenophobia sells newspapers. The truth is that like the other waves of immigrants to Britain, those coming here will overwhelmingly be people with initiative, people who want to better their prospects. And our economy needs them. Immigrants don't steal jobs from the existing British workforce: all the evidence suggests they make possible the creation of new jobs. Mass immigration has always enriched economies and cultures and never more so than in the present globalised world. Yes, it's easy to stoke the fires of xenophobia and get the British public all ugly on the issue, but it's wrong: the pundits and the politicians should be allaying public fears of immigration not pandering to them.
That's the liberal "metropolitan" line, but as its critics see it, it overlooks a crucial aspect of the human personality: we are not a random jumble of individuals who just happen to inhabit the same small island. We are a nation, they say: and our sense of identity with nation is, or should be, central to who we are. And while no civilised nation, least of all Britain, should be opposed to immigration, we should be opposed to the unprecedented scale on which it has been occurring. It's the numbers, stupid. Immigrants have undoubtedly enriched our culture, but for there to be such a thing as British culture, for there to be a sense of nationhood and national pride, it is essential that the newcomers be absorbed into British life rather than form distinct cultural colonies. There's nothing racist about this. Nothing racist in feeling apprehensive about the next influx from Eastern Europe, for example. It's not just a matter of what that might mean for our overstrained services and for British citizens competing for low-paid jobs: it's the damage done to our sense of belonging to the same community. This isn't some kind of extremist position: as polls have shown, seven out of ten Britons think there are too many foreigners in the country.

The Truth About Immigration in the UK 2014 (BBC, HD 720p)

Did Britain need immigrants to keep economy growing?
BBC political editor Nick Robinson examines the public's anxieties about immigration and reveals the facts of an issue that has transformed British politics. With Britain braced for a new wave of migrants from eastern Europe, a subject once regarded as toxic is now at the forefront of political discussion. The programme dissects the decisions which led to the biggest surge of immigration in modern history and asks whether politicians can control immigration as much as they claim, looking at the potential consequences of their pledges.

22:02

The Spanish Dishonor Their Ancestors And Allow Migrants To Undo 300 Years Of Reconquista

Alex Jones shows how Spanish beach goers sit idly by as a rubber boat docks at the shore a...

Migration in Europe What Trends to Watch in 2018 1 31 2018 Video

Is 2018 the year that the European Union takes leadership on migration on the international stage, or where it focuses inwards on healing internal divisions and delivering on overdue migration and asylum system reforms? With two high-profile compacts on migration and refugees being negotiated by the United Nations, Europe can potentially seize the momentum to shape a new international migration framework—and fill the vacuum left by the United States’ withdrawal. But with a series of critical elections across the continent, and key states struggling to form coalition governments, Europe’s ability to set the agenda may be limited. Europe may need to first get its own house in order, passing reforms to the Dublin Regulations, hammering down citizens’ rights post-Brexit, and designing strategic legal pathways, to name a few. This webinar looks ahead at the major external and internal events affecting migration on the continent over the next year.
Speakers included:
- ElizabethCollett, Director, Migration Policy Institute Europe
- Milan Nič, Senior Fellow, Robert BoschCenter for Central and Eastern Europe, Russia, and Central Asia, German Council on Foreign Relations
- Pierre Vimont, Senior Fellow, Carnegie Europe
And the conversation was moderated by: Natalia Banulescu-Bogdan, Associate Director, InternationalProgram, Migration Policy Institute
www.migrationpolicy.org

25:04

Italy - Debate on Whether current migration destroy Europe as we know it

Italy - Debate on Whether current migration destroy Europe as we know it

EU Immigration's Shocking New Trend

The EU's New Refugees: Waves of immigration have always been a source of political tension in Europe. Now, the EU is facing up to an unusual new migration worry: floods of migrants fleeing from the continent's faltering economies.
For downloads and more visit: http://www.journeyman.tv/?lid=65135&bid=2
The boom years are over, and now faltering European nations are all experiencing this new trend in emigration. In thePortuguese capital Lisbon, queues form outside African embassies as EU citizens try to acquire working visas. According to ex-pat JulianaFleming, "I know many people who are trying to sell their homes in Portugal, to settle in Mozambique". 300,000 have left Spain since the banking crisis in 2008. ChefCarlos Garcia couldn't find work in Madrid, so instead went to look in Argentina. "You walk in the centre of Buenos Aires, and you feel like you are in Spain. I strongly recommend it to anyone who sees no future prospects". And though many of those escaping do wish to return if the situation improves back home, most aren't hopeful about how soon that may be. "First it was 2013, now they say 2014. We'll see."
ORF - Ref. 5722
JourneymanPictures is your independent source for the world's most powerful films, exploring the burning issues of today. We represent stories from the world's top producers, with brand new content coming in all the time. On our channel you'll find outstanding and controversial journalism covering any global subject you can imagine wanting to know about.

What Pisses Me Off About The European Migrant Crisis

MP3Download: http://www.fdrpodcasts.com/#/3065/what-pisses-me-off-about-the-european-migrant-crisis
The European migrant crisis arose through the rising number of migrant arrivals seeking asylum – a combination of economic migrants and refugees – to the European Union (EU) across the Mediterranean Sea and the Balkans fromAfrica, the Middle East, and South Asia.
German ChancellorAngela Merkel said that Germany expected over 800,000 asylum seekers to come this year - over four times more than in 2014. European Union member states agreed in July to take in more than 32,000 migrants to “ease the burden” on Italy and Greece, where the largest numbers have arrived. Another eight-thousand should be allocated by the end of the year, according to the European Union's commissioner for migration.
Stefan Molyneux is pissed off – and provides an important look at the EuropeanMigrantCrisis.
GermanVersion:Was mich an der Europäischen Flüchtlingskrise ärgert: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=43UX0XOTUHY
Freedomain Radio is 100% funded by viewers like you. Please support the show by signing up for a monthly subscription or making a one time donation at: http://www.fdrurl.com/donate
Get more from Stefan Molyneux and Freedomain Radio including books, podcasts and other info at: http://www.freedomainradio.com
Sources
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/11721008/Europe-migrant-crisis-Where-are-the-asylum-seekers-coming-from-and-where-are-they-going.html
http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained/index.php/Asylum_quarterly_report
http://www.theguardian.com/world/datablog/2015/aug/27/germany-gets-27-syrian-asylum-applications-for-every-one-to-the-uk
http://www.economist.com/news/europe/21661941-wanting-burden-shared-germany-eu-country-which-takes-most-asylum-seekers-straining
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/germany/11675380/Germany-industry-chiefs-call-for-jobs-for-asylum-seekers.html
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/01/01/us-germany-immigration-idUSKBN0KA1KZ20150101

1:56:05

MANUELA BOJADŽIJEV: „Is (neo-)racism a form of violence of the past?“

MANUELA BOJADŽIJEV: „Is (neo-)racism a form of violence of the past?“ Conjunctures of raci...

MANUELA BOJADŽIJEV: „Is (neo-)racism a form of violence of the past?“

MANUELA BOJADŽIJEV: „Is (neo-)racism a form of violence of the past?“ Conjunctures of racism theory
In my talk I will address the question of violence conceptually by focussing on racism as a form of violence. I will ask how we can understand racism. The question of time in relation to racism as a form of violence is relevant. While some may argue that racism is an outdated form of violence which, albeit its recurrent return, receives no substantial renewal and is therefore to be understood as „the surviving old in the new“; others have argued that racism has proliferated to a degree that is has by now become almost ubiquitous. In order to anchor the debate I will offer a genealogy of critical racism theory in Germany, focussing on its conceptual values and guiding problematics for the field of analysis, its resonance within a wider international debate, and the questions that it raises that are open for debate today. I therefore propose for the discussion less a particular regional focus of the theme but rather the questions in how far this panorama of historical and conceptual contributions can help to conceptualise the violence of racism for today.
Manuela Bojadžijev is professor at the Institute for Sociology and Cultural Organisation, Leuphana UniversityLüneburg, and is a Member of the Berlin Institute for Integration and MigrationResearch (BIM) at Humboldt University, Berlin. She specializes on migration and racism in Europe, and on cultural theory. Her research focuses currently on issues of the changing conjunctures of racism in Europe as well as on mobile labor and logistics in a digitized economy. Manuela Bojadzijev has paid particular attention to how the processes of racialization transform in globalizing context, including for instance citizenship, post-colonialism and -socialism, media technology, the state, (trans-)nationalism, and popular culture. She is recently engaged in a project on the Chinese new silk road in Duisburg, together with Brett Neilson and Ned Rossiter of Western Sydney University. She is also part of a research and art project on the “Archive of Escape” at the House of World Cultures in Berlin, together with Carolin Emcke, Jopseph Vogel, Stephanie Schüler-Spingorum, and Ethel Matal de Mazza, and others.
From 2013 to 2016 Manuela Bojadžijev has been organizing a series of international summer schools at Humboldt-University, Berlin (2013: ’Teaching the Crisis’; 2014: ‘Expanding the Margins’; 2015-16 ‘Investigating Logistics’). A conference on the 30th anniversary of the publication of Race, Class, Nation with Etienne Balibar and Immanuel Wallerstein is under way for 2018.
Her major publications include a monograph on the history of migration in relation to migrants’ practices of resistance and racism theory (Die windige Internationale, Westfälisches Dampfboot 2008) and co-edited volumes (amongst others) on the transformation of the European migration regime in South East Europe (Turbulente Ränder. Neue Perspektiven auf Migration an den Grenzen Europas, 2008); on critical accounts of Europeanization (Europa dezentrieren. Beiträge zu einer reflexiven Anthropologie globaler Verflechtungen, Forthcoming); on labour, migration and logistics (Logistische Grenzlandschaften, 2017); and a handbook of racism theory in Germany (forthcoming). Her most recent articles and book chapters deal with the development of racism theories in Germany; the discourse of the ‘refugees crisis’ after 2015; logistics as a perspective for migration studies (co-authored with Sandro Mezzadra); virtual migration, labour and racism (co-authored with Moritz Altenried).

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